US3816786A - Display device comprising a profusion of naked droplets of cholesteric liquid crystal in a substantially continuous polymeric matrix - Google Patents

Display device comprising a profusion of naked droplets of cholesteric liquid crystal in a substantially continuous polymeric matrix Download PDF

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US3816786A
US3816786A US00282881A US28288172A US3816786A US 3816786 A US3816786 A US 3816786A US 00282881 A US00282881 A US 00282881A US 28288172 A US28288172 A US 28288172A US 3816786 A US3816786 A US 3816786A
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liquid crystal
cholesteric liquid
color
chromatic
film
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D Churchill
J Cartmell
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WTA Inc
NCR Voyix Corp
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    • GPHYSICS
    • G02OPTICS
    • G02FOPTICAL DEVICES OR ARRANGEMENTS FOR THE CONTROL OF LIGHT BY MODIFICATION OF THE OPTICAL PROPERTIES OF THE MEDIA OF THE ELEMENTS INVOLVED THEREIN; NON-LINEAR OPTICS; FREQUENCY-CHANGING OF LIGHT; OPTICAL LOGIC ELEMENTS; OPTICAL ANALOGUE/DIGITAL CONVERTERS
    • G02F1/00Devices or arrangements for the control of the intensity, colour, phase, polarisation or direction of light arriving from an independent light source, e.g. switching, gating or modulating; Non-linear optics
    • G02F1/01Devices or arrangements for the control of the intensity, colour, phase, polarisation or direction of light arriving from an independent light source, e.g. switching, gating or modulating; Non-linear optics for the control of the intensity, phase, polarisation or colour 
    • G02F1/13Devices or arrangements for the control of the intensity, colour, phase, polarisation or direction of light arriving from an independent light source, e.g. switching, gating or modulating; Non-linear optics for the control of the intensity, phase, polarisation or colour  based on liquid crystals, e.g. single liquid crystal display cells
    • G02F1/133Constructional arrangements; Operation of liquid crystal cells; Circuit arrangements
    • G02F1/1333Constructional arrangements; Manufacturing methods
    • G02F1/1334Constructional arrangements; Manufacturing methods based on polymer dispersed liquid crystals, e.g. microencapsulated liquid crystals
    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B41PRINTING; LINING MACHINES; TYPEWRITERS; STAMPS
    • B41MPRINTING, DUPLICATING, MARKING, OR COPYING PROCESSES; COLOUR PRINTING
    • B41M5/00Duplicating or marking methods; Sheet materials for use therein
    • B41M5/26Thermography ; Marking by high energetic means, e.g. laser otherwise than by burning, and characterised by the material used
    • B41M5/28Thermography ; Marking by high energetic means, e.g. laser otherwise than by burning, and characterised by the material used using thermochromic compounds or layers containing liquid crystals, microcapsules, bleachable dyes or heat- decomposable compounds, e.g. gas- liberating
    • B41M5/281Thermography ; Marking by high energetic means, e.g. laser otherwise than by burning, and characterised by the material used using thermochromic compounds or layers containing liquid crystals, microcapsules, bleachable dyes or heat- decomposable compounds, e.g. gas- liberating using liquid crystals only
    • CCHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
    • C09DYES; PAINTS; POLISHES; NATURAL RESINS; ADHESIVES; COMPOSITIONS NOT OTHERWISE PROVIDED FOR; APPLICATIONS OF MATERIALS NOT OTHERWISE PROVIDED FOR
    • C09KMATERIALS FOR MISCELLANEOUS APPLICATIONS, NOT PROVIDED FOR ELSEWHERE
    • C09K19/00Liquid crystal materials
    • C09K19/52Liquid crystal materials characterised by components which are not liquid crystals, e.g. additives with special physical aspect: solvents, solid particles
    • C09K19/54Additives having no specific mesophase characterised by their chemical composition
    • C09K19/542Macromolecular compounds
    • C09K19/544Macromolecular compounds as dispersing or encapsulating medium around the liquid crystal
    • GPHYSICS
    • G02OPTICS
    • G02FOPTICAL DEVICES OR ARRANGEMENTS FOR THE CONTROL OF LIGHT BY MODIFICATION OF THE OPTICAL PROPERTIES OF THE MEDIA OF THE ELEMENTS INVOLVED THEREIN; NON-LINEAR OPTICS; FREQUENCY-CHANGING OF LIGHT; OPTICAL LOGIC ELEMENTS; OPTICAL ANALOGUE/DIGITAL CONVERTERS
    • G02F1/00Devices or arrangements for the control of the intensity, colour, phase, polarisation or direction of light arriving from an independent light source, e.g. switching, gating or modulating; Non-linear optics
    • G02F1/01Devices or arrangements for the control of the intensity, colour, phase, polarisation or direction of light arriving from an independent light source, e.g. switching, gating or modulating; Non-linear optics for the control of the intensity, phase, polarisation or colour 
    • G02F1/13Devices or arrangements for the control of the intensity, colour, phase, polarisation or direction of light arriving from an independent light source, e.g. switching, gating or modulating; Non-linear optics for the control of the intensity, phase, polarisation or colour  based on liquid crystals, e.g. single liquid crystal display cells
    • G02F1/133Constructional arrangements; Operation of liquid crystal cells; Circuit arrangements
    • G02F1/1333Constructional arrangements; Manufacturing methods
    • GPHYSICS
    • G09EDUCATION; CRYPTOGRAPHY; DISPLAY; ADVERTISING; SEALS
    • G09GARRANGEMENTS OR CIRCUITS FOR CONTROL OF INDICATING DEVICES USING STATIC MEANS TO PRESENT VARIABLE INFORMATION
    • G09G3/00Control arrangements or circuits, of interest only in connection with visual indicators other than cathode-ray tubes
    • G09G3/001Control arrangements or circuits, of interest only in connection with visual indicators other than cathode-ray tubes using specific devices not provided for in groups G09G3/02 - G09G3/36, e.g. using an intermediate record carrier such as a film slide; Projection systems; Display of non-alphanumerical information, solely or in combination with alphanumerical information, e.g. digital display on projected diapositive as background
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H01ELECTRIC ELEMENTS
    • H01JELECTRIC DISCHARGE TUBES OR DISCHARGE LAMPS
    • H01J29/00Details of cathode-ray tubes or of electron-beam tubes of the types covered by group H01J31/00
    • H01J29/02Electrodes; Screens; Mounting, supporting, spacing or insulating thereof
    • H01J29/10Screens on or from which an image or pattern is formed, picked up, converted or stored
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H01ELECTRIC ELEMENTS
    • H01JELECTRIC DISCHARGE TUBES OR DISCHARGE LAMPS
    • H01J29/00Details of cathode-ray tubes or of electron-beam tubes of the types covered by group H01J31/00
    • H01J29/02Electrodes; Screens; Mounting, supporting, spacing or insulating thereof
    • H01J29/10Screens on or from which an image or pattern is formed, picked up, converted or stored
    • H01J29/14Screens on or from which an image or pattern is formed, picked up, converted or stored acting by discoloration, e.g. halide screen

Definitions

  • the polymer matrix protects the cholesteric liquid crystal droplets from aging and enhances electric field behavior because the third chromatic state (electric potential removed) has a greater longevity with the matrix-bound material versus unprotected material of identical composition but no polymeric matrix. Other advantages are also discussed.
  • the present invention is directed to an article of manufacture for utilizing an electric field to obtain an easily-discernible, stable, and optionally either comparatively permanent or readily heat-eraseable chromatic (color and/or reflectance, viz., reflective intensity) representation of comparable outline to said electric field. Since the chromatic representation is stable, it can serve a storage (memory) function.
  • the chromatic representation can be generated by a one-shot signal output, viz., an electronic computer output signal, a single sweep signal such as a radar scan, a display panel where information may be entered once for an extended period storage such as an air terminal schedule display.
  • the chromatic representation in the color stable (storage) state is capable of representing a fixed body or state of information which can be retrieved and examined readily without requiring continuous electric field potential, e.g., continuous potential such as that obtained from an electron gun, e.g., cathode ray tube, using conventional electronic computer equipment.
  • continuous electric field potential e.g., continuous potential such as that obtained from an electron gun, e.g., cathode ray tube
  • the article of this invention comprises, in its essential components, a pair of spaced electrodes with a matrixbound, droplet-containing cholesteric liquid crystalline member located in such a position that the electrodes impose an electric potential on said liquid cyrstal member.
  • the electrodes are positioned such that the first electrode (the electrode closer to the viewing agency, e.g., eyes of the viewer) and second electrode (the electrode more remote from the viewing agency, e.g., viewer's eyes) are in electric field-generating proximity to one another and the intermediate chloresteric liquid crystalline member can, but need not, be in contact with the first and/or second electrode. Both direct current and alternating current can be employed to produce the electric field.
  • the cholesteric liquid crystalline member can be composed of a single substantially continuous polymer matrix-bound, naked droplet or inclusion of cholesteric liquid crystalline material, but usually said member is composed of a plurality (and preferably a profusion) of individual, minute, naked droplets or inclusions of cholesteric liquid crystalline material.
  • liquid crystal as used herein, is employed in the generic, art-recognized sense to mean the state of matter often referred to as a mesophase, wherein the material exhibits flow properties associated with a liquid state but demonstrates long range ordering characteristics of a crystal.
  • the cholesteric liquid crystal refers to a particular type of mesophase most often demonstrated by esters of cholesterol.
  • the polymer matrix-bound cholesteric liquid crystalline droplet-containing member can be, and usually is, composed of droplets of a mixture of materials which form a cholesteric liquid crystal.
  • the term naked as used herein refers to the fact that the droplets of liquid crystal material have no covering except for the polymeric matrix in which they are located. insofar as the large majority of droplets are concerned, the polymer matrix is continuous, that is to say that the internally located droplets are totally enveloped by a given portion of the matrix. Many of the droplets located close to the outer surface(s) of the matrix are likewise in a continuous matrix of polymer material.
  • Some of the droplets are on the surface or a portion thereof has direct access to the open air through an opening(s) in the polymer matrix.
  • the term substantially continuous accurately describes the polymer matrix which contains the vast majority of liquid crystal droplets.
  • At least one of the materials in the cholesteric liquid crystalline phase must be chromatically responsive to an electric field of the requisite intensity.
  • the direction at which the field is applied to said member viz., perpendicular or essentially parallel to the direction of viewing is immaterial.
  • the first and second electrodes need not be (and usually are not) coextensive throughout their entire extent and the cholesteric liquid crystalline member need not be in direct contact with either or both electrodes; it is necessary for both the first and second electrodes to be close enough to one another and to the intermediate cholesteric liquid crystalline member to enable the formation of an electric field between the first and second electrodes.
  • the cholesteric liquid crystalline member contains a cholesteric liquid crystalline material which is chromatically responsive to an electric field of from about l0,000 to about 1,000,000 volts per centimeter of thickness of the cholesteric liquid crystalline droplet-containing member.
  • chromatically responsive is meant that the cholesteric liquid crystalline material (present in droplet form in the substantially continuous polymer matrix defining the cholesteric liquid crystalline member) must exhibit either an apparent change in color and/or reflective intensity (as viewed from incident white light) upon application of an electrical field of the above specified requisite intensity thereto.
  • chromatic response is intended to include both changes (shift of wavelength) in color and changes in intensity of reflectance of the same color so that it appears different in color or shade of color from the previous color state(s).
  • a change in color is synonymous with a change in reflective intensity and vice versa.
  • the term apparent is employed to denote that the color effect induced or brought about by the electric field, or subsequent to its application, is different from the pre-existing (natural) color or absence thereof present in the liquid crystals, per se.
  • the electric field employed will have an intensity ranging from about 20,000 to 200,000 volts per centimeter of thickness of the encapsulated cholesteric liquid crystalline member.
  • the substantially continuous polymeric matrix enables better adhesion between the cholesteric liquid crystal member and the first and second electrodes or comparable contiguous surfaces. Also, the presence of the polymeric matrix (which can be controlled to be of uniform and accurate thickness) serves to enhance the optical homogeneity of the chromatic representation (image) observed in the display device.
  • the liquid crystals change color (or reflective intensity) substantially instantaneously to 80 milliseconds) to shift from a first chromatic state (that normal color state existing prior to the application of an electric field thereto) to a second chromatic state, viz., the chromatic state existing due to the presence of the electric potential.
  • the second chromatic state demonstrates a color (or reflective intensity) different from that of the first chromatic state, and this difference is preferably readily recon gizable to the naked eye.
  • the color changes from the second chromatic state to a third chromatic state and the color (or reflective intensity) exhibited by the liquid crystal material in the third chromatic state is different from that of the color given off in the second chromatic state and first chromatic state, respectively.
  • a very unusual and advantageous feature of a preferred embodiment of the present invention resides in the fact that the third chromatic state displays a stability and permanence color-wise, viz., it does not readily fade" back to the first'chromatic state.
  • the matrix entrapped cholestoric liquid crystal droplets have the ability to retain the third chromatic state in most cases for at least several orders of magnitude of the time longer than the unprotected material. This retention ability can be employed in storing information for future use.
  • Suitable chromatically responsive cholesteric liquid crystal materials include, but are not limited to, the following: cholesteryl halides, e.g., cholesteryl chloride, cholesteryl bromide and cholesteryl iodide; cholesteryl nitrate and other mixed esters of cholesterol and inorganic acids; cholesteryl esters of saturated and unsaturated, substituted and unsubstituted organic acids, esp.
  • cholesteryl halides e.g., cholesteryl chloride, cholesteryl bromide and cholesteryl iodide
  • cholesteryl nitrate and other mixed esters of cholesterol and inorganic acids cholesteryl esters of saturated and unsaturated, substituted and unsubstituted organic acids, esp.
  • cholesteryl esters of C, to C aliphatic, monocarboxylic acids e.g., cholesteryl nonanoate, cholesteryl crotonate, cholesteryl cholorformate, cholesteryl chlorodecanoate, cholesteryl chloroeicosanoate, cholesteryl butyrate, cholesteryl caprate, cholesteryl oleate, cholesteryl linolate, cholesteryl linolenate, cholesteryl laurate, cholesteryl erucate, cholesteryl myristate, cholesteryl clupanodonate, oleyi cholesteryl carbonate, cholesteryl heptyl carbamate, decyl cholesteryl carbonate; cholesteryl esters of unsubstituted or halogenated aryl, -alkenaryl, -aralkenyl, -alkaryl and -aralkyl organic acids, especially chol
  • chromaticallyelectric potential responsive cholesteric liquid crystalline material viz., individual chromatically responsive compounds
  • the chromatically-electric potential responsive materials can be used in admixture.
  • the use of such mixtures is actually preferable in many cases because with mixtures the liquid crystalline state can be maintained more readily at ambient room temperatures without requiring extraneous heating.
  • an individual chromatically responsive compound it is frequently necessary to heat the immediate environment (where the device is to be employed) in order to maintain the material in the liquid crystal state because many such materials are solids at ambient roomtemperatures.
  • cholesteric liquid crystal materials which can be employed in accordance with this invention include, but are not limited to, the following: cholesteryl nonanoate, cholesteryl chloride and cholesteryl cinnamate; cholesteryl nonanoate and cholesteryl chloride; cholesteryl nonanoate and cholesteryl bromide; cholesteryl nonanoate, cholesteryl bromide and cholesteryl cinnamate; cholesteryl nonanoate, cholesteryl iodide and cholesteryl cinnamate; cholesteryl nonanaote, cholesteryl iodide and cholesteryl benzoate; cholesteryl nonanoate, cholesteryl chloride and oleyl cholesteryl carbonate;
  • cholesteric liquid crystalline mixtures are mixtures of two or more individual materials, one ormore of which individually does not form a cholesteric liquid crystal phase but which in admixture exhibit a cholesteric liquid crystal phase.
  • two or three materials which individually are not cholesteric liquid crystals can be employed in accordance with this invention if, when in admixture, they do exhibit cholesteric liquid crystal behavior, viz., they form a mesophase which demonstrates the property of reflection light scattering.
  • One such mixture is cholesteryl nonanoate, oleyl cholesteryl carbonate and cholesterol. The latter material, by itself, does not form a cholesteric liquid crystalline phase; but does so in combination with the other cholesteric materials.
  • Various natural and synthetic film-forming polymeric materials can be employed to constitute the polymeric matrix, film or coating in which the individual droplets or inclusions of cholesteric liquid crystal material are located.
  • Any transparent or substantially transparent film-forming polymeric material with adequate electrical insulation properties and which is soluble in a liquid which does not dissolve or substantially chemically affect the liquid crystal material adversely can be used.
  • Suitable representative film-forming polymeric materials for this purposeinclude, but are not limited to, the following: polyvinyl alcohol; gelatin, gum arabic, zein, a prolamine film former derived from the alcohol extraction of zea mays, a grain commonly called lndian corn; hydroxy ethyl cellulose; polyvinyl pyrrolidone; polyethylene oxide; copolymers of ethylene and maleic anhydride; copolymers of vinyl methyl ether and maleic anhydride; etc.
  • the cholesteric liquid crystals can be dispersed or positioned within the polymer matrix conveniently by emulsifying minute droplets of liquid crystal material in a dryable liquid solution of the filmforming polymeric material which is to constitute the polymer matrix.
  • the droplets of liquid crystal material are emulsified in an aqueous solution of film-forming polymer. Since an extremely small droplet size of cholesteric liquid crystal material can be maintained in an emulsion, coatings of films prepared therefrom allow a good optical resolution and have a smooth surface(s). These characteristics enhance the optical or visual readout of display devices containing the droplets in the matrix.
  • individual droplet size can range from about 0.5 to about 50 microns, but usually the individual droplet size ranges from about 1 to about 30 microns.
  • Average droplet size can range from about I to 30 microns but usually ranges from about 5 to about 20 microns.
  • Films prepared by drying these emulsions, containing the minute individual liquid crystal droplets or inclusions, can be stained ortinted as desired to enable the polymer matrix to serve as a color filter for light traveling to and from the liquid crystal material.
  • Such a system can be used where a narrowing of the broad iridescent effect present in some liquid crystal materials in the second and third chromatic states is desired.
  • such films can also be pigmented slightly, but care should be exercised to avoid use of an excessive amount of pigment or other non-light reflecting material as it can diminish the color response and brilliance due to interference with incident and reflected light.
  • Comparative tests between polymer matrixprotected cholesteric liquid crystal materials versus films of unprotected liquid crystal materials of identical composition reveal several important advantages for the films comprised of droplets of cholesteric liquid crystal material in a substantially continuous polymer matrix when employed in the articles of this invention.
  • One of the major advantages resides in the apparent prevention of crystallization of the liquid crystals and mixtures thereof, or at least a diminution in the tendency towards crystallization.
  • many cholesteric liquid crystal materials and mixtures are normally solid at room temperature. These mixtures often super-cool considerably so that crystallization is not immediate at ambient room temperatures.
  • Another advantage attainable in the articles of the present invention is the ability of the matrix-entrapped material to retain the third chromatic state for comparatively permanent periods of time versus the comparatively transitory retention of the third chromatic state in the case of unrestrained cholesteric liquid crystals.
  • a further and equally important practical advantage of use of the matrix-retained droplets of cholesteric liquid crystals is their ability to be used in multicomponent (multi-color) systems, viz., as coatings or incorporated in a matrix containing a plurality of different cholesteric liquid crystalline mixtures, each mixture giving a characteristic color throughout the three chromatic stages referred to hereinabove with the different mixtures being employed in close proximity so that a multi-colored display is achieved in one, two or all three chromatic states.
  • polychromatic displays can be achieved by using a plurality of switched leads or contacts. In one case, some switches can be turned on and the others left off which creates a polycolored efiect using differently colored mixtures or one mixture.
  • Another way to achieve such an effect is to use a plurality of mixtures each of which is responsive at a different level of intensity of field potential to exhibit a different apparent color or shade of color.
  • Yet another way of achieving the polychromatic displays is to have some switches turned on and-then turn a portion of them off so that some switches are on, and some switches are off (neverhaving been turned on) some of which were previously on. This works well with a single cholesteric liquid crystal material, one mixture or a plurality of differently colored mixtures.
  • a still further advantage of the articles of the present invention include their processing flexibility in that a wider range of devices can be prepared to meet a wider range of specifications.
  • electric field sensitive display devices utilizing polymer matrixretained cholesteric liquid crystal droplets can be prepared to be either flat or curved, and either rigid or flexible.
  • pure cholesteric liquid crystal films for all practical purposes they require two flat, rigid, evenlyspaced electrodes.
  • these use-limiting requirements are not applicable to the matrix-retained products because the substantially-continuous polymer matrix furnishes the uniform support to the extent required, yet can be flexible enough to accommodate complex shapes.
  • the polymer matrix not only protects the cholesteric liquid crystalline material, e.g., from deleterious orientation and other adverse surface effects, but due to the extremely small droplet size which can be maintained in an emulsion also substantially supplies a uniform thickness to the film thereof since the coating provides the droplets in a condition of roughly uniform diameter. This results in smooth coatings of good optical resolution.
  • Some systems containing a mixture of one or more intermingled cholesteric liquid crystal compounds, as a film, are subject to crystallization of large areas at the desired working temperatures. This undesirable crystallization tends to concentrate one of the active materials at each crystallization site to thereby separate it from the other components of such a mixture. in turn, component separation results in loss of precision and efficiency of color change;
  • cholesteric liquid crystal materials which are chromatically responsive to an electric field are cholesterol derivatives which are oily liquids at and above their melting temperatures.
  • the film being wet
  • the film is subject to injury and contamination, e.g., from aging and contact with the environment.
  • dust particles are easily entrapped by the liquid surface and can serve as undesirable nucleation sites for crystallization.
  • such films are exposed to contact with any material in the vicinity with resultant disorganization and possible change of thickness in localized areas thereby altering chromatic response;
  • Non-uniform optical and electrical surface effects exhibited at the electrodes e.g., orientation at the surface of the cholesteric liquid crystal film.
  • the present invention overcomes or alleviates most, if not all, of these problems.
  • the total (overall) thickness of the cholesteric liquid crystalline member can range from about 0.001 to about 0.05 centimeters (not counting the thickness of any optional protective film applied thereto).
  • the film thickness of the cholesteric liquid crystalline member ranges from about 0.003 to about 0.01 centimeters and preferably from about 0.005 to about 0.0] centimeters.
  • the film can be of a thickness to include only a single layer or a few layers of liquid crystal droplets, or the film can include a larger number of layers thereof, within its thickness.
  • both electrodes can be composed of nontransparent material or presented in non-transparent form (note FIG. 4); it is usually preferable that the first electrode by transparent.
  • the first electrode can be formed of any transparent electroconductive material.
  • the transparent first electrode can be composed of transparent metal or metal oxide films, coatings or other electro-conductive layers. Suitable metal and metal oxide materials which can be employed for this purpose include, but are not limited to, the following: tin oxide, gold, platinum, chromium, nickel.
  • transparent film can be made by using very thin homogeneous coatings or preparing a series of very thin, closely spaced ribbons of the metal by photoetching away percent or more of the material.
  • a more comprehensive listing of suitable transparent metal and metal oxide electric conductive films can be found in US. Pat. No. 2,628,927 to Colbert et al., the disclosure of which is incorporated herein by reference.
  • the deposition of the transparent electrode can be upon a protective inorganic, e.g., glass, or organic, e.g., acrylate or alkyl acrylate polymer plastic or other polymeric protective base material, which then constitutes the upper or viewing surface through which the cholesteric liquid crystalline members chromatic response to the electric potential is viewed.
  • Various transparent plastic and resinous protective layers can be first provided with a transparent electro-conductive layer by known coating or deposition techniques, such as e.g., those indicated in any one of the following US. Pat. Nos. 2,704,265; 2,739,083; 2,740,732; 2,750,832; 2,904,450; 2,907,672; 3,001,901 and 3,020,376.
  • the transparent first electrode is placed in direct contact with the cholesteric liquid crystalline member.
  • suitable exemplary procedures for depositing electro-conductive coatings upon the glass or plastic base include thermal sputtering or evaporative coating using metal halide solutions from a vacuum to which oxygen is then applied in order to oxidize the metal halide salt and form the metal oxide film in situ upon the desired base material.
  • Other satisfactory conventional techniques are used when forming metal coatings, e.g., by chemical reduction, viz., coating a metal salt solution containing a reducing agent to reduce the metal salt to yield the metal film (one step procedure) or coating a metal salt onto the base, followed by a second coating using a solution containing a reducing agent (two step procedure), the latter procedure being similar to that used to form silver mirror films.
  • the first electrode is non-transparent, e.g., in the form of a thin, electron-emitting, resistive wire(s) as in FIG. 4; the wire(s) can be positioned so as not to obstruct or interfere substantially with the observed image.
  • the second electrode can be composed of any electroconductive material and need not be transparent;
  • the second electrode is neither transparent nor coextensive with the first electrode throughout its entire extent;
  • the second electrode can be imposed in the pattern of a printed circuit or it can have any desired configuration.
  • the second electrode can be deposited in transparent, nontransparent or partially transparent form, using such materials as copper, silver, gold, iron-containing metal alloys, carbon black, graphite, lead sulfide, etc.
  • That background can, itself, be an electrode, e.g., be prepared from black paints, black dye, etc., containing an electro-conductive component such as carbon black or black anodized metal.
  • the black background is not always necessary however. Note the description in conjunction with FIG. 6 in this respect.
  • an insulating glass, plastic or other transparent or substantially transparent material as a protective layer on top of the transparent first electrode.
  • Suitable materials from which protective protectivve layer can be made include, but are not limited to, the following Various types of glass and inorganic ceramics, such as conventional soda-lime-silica glass; lithia-soda-limesilica glass; potassia-sodalithia-alumina-silica glass, various organic glass and other transparent organic polymeric materials, such as the methacrylate and alkylmethacrylate and alkylacrylate plastics, e.g., polymethylmethacrylates, polyethylmethacrylates, polymethylacrylates, polyethyl acrylates, and other acrylic acid and methacrylic acid homo and copolymers.
  • Other transparent or substantially transparent insulating protective materials suitable for use will be apparent to those skilled in the art.
  • a protective layer of glass, plastic, or other electrically insulating material can be employed as a surfacing layer to protect that side of the article in close proximity to said second electrode and the conductive element(s) or leads in contact therewith.
  • FIG. 1 of the drawings is a cross-sectional view through a liquid crystal member or component.
  • FIG. 2 is a cross-sectional view through one embodiment ofthe present invention which illustrates a display device.
  • FIG. 3 is likewise a cross-sectional view of an article of this invention illustrating an alternative display device.
  • FIG. 4 is a cross-sectional view of a vacuum tube display device wherein the field is supplied by electrons drawn to the surface of the liquid crystalline member.
  • FIG. 5 is a cross-sectional view through a cathode ray tube containing the structure of the present invention and serving as a display device.
  • FIG. 6 is a cross-sectional view of an alternative form of cathode ray tube utilizing the present invention.
  • FIG. 7 is a cross-sectional view of yet another device illustrative of this invention wherein both an electric field and thermal energy can be utilized to impose transient and/or comparatively permanent colored images on the same cholesteric liquid crystal member.
  • selected images can be stored and others erased.
  • Transient images (imposed by heat) can be changed at will on a stored image background of contrasting color.
  • FIG. 1 shows the presence of cholesteric liquid crystal member 3 comprised of a plurality of minute, individual, naked droplets or inclusions, a, of cholesteric liquid crystal material confined within a substantially continuous matrix, b, of polymeric material.
  • the droplets have a random shape and are reasonably uniformly distributed (dispersed) within the polymer matrix.
  • An optional thin, protective barrier film e.g., poly ethylene glycol terephthalate Mylar polyester can be deposited on one or both major surfaces of liquid crystal member 3 to prevent deleterious solvation of surface located liquid crystal material, e.g., by a solvent component(s) such as may be contained in opaque lacquer film 4 of FIG. 2.
  • a solvent component(s) such as may be contained in opaque lacquer film 4 of FIG. 2.
  • transparent (glass or plastic) insulating protective layer 1 is directly in contact with transparent first electrode 2 which in turn is in intimate contact with the cholesteric liquid crystalline member 3.
  • the cholesteric liquid crystalline member is composed of an array or profusion of minute droplets, a, of cholesteric liquid crystalline material retained within a substantially continuous polymeric matrix, b, with or without a protective barrier film (not shown) on one or both sides thereof.
  • the polymeric film, b serves as an effective insulator between both of said electrodes.
  • a black lacquer insulating film 4 to enhance the observation of the chromatic changes in the liquid crystalline member.
  • Conductive elements 5 are located intermediate between lower protective layer 6 (usually glass or plastic) and black insulating film 4. While FIG. 2 shows three such elements, it should be clearly understood that any desired number can be used and the configuration thereof can be arranged in any desired display pattern, sequence or shape.
  • the chromatic representation viewed through the transparent layers of l and 2 will conform closely with the configuration defined by the field established between conductive elements 5 and the top electrode. That is to say that the configuration established by the elements 5 will be reproduced, but in different color or intensity of reflectance from the surrounding film areas when looking down through the transparent protective layer 1 and transparent first electrode 2.
  • a further chromatic change takes place in the configuration areas wherein the cholesteric liquid crystalline material rapidly changes from the second chromatic state to the third chromatic state characterized by the ability of the cholesteric liquid crystalline member to retain a substantially permanent and different chromatic state for extended periods of time under normal atmospheric conditions of temperature and humidity.
  • a sealer tape or potting compound (not shown) can be applied to the outer peripheral edge(s) to aid in sealing the various layers against lateral and interfacial exposure to the atmosphere at the peripheral edge surfaces.
  • P10. 3 illustrates an alternative display device and is comprised of transparent glass plate 1 in contact with transparent electroconductive film 2 which in turn is in contact with liquid crystalline member 3, which is composed of a profusion of minute cholesteric liquid crystal droplets or inclusions present in a retaining matrix of insulating polymeric film.
  • Black insulating film 4 is deposited by coating on the cholesteric liquid crystalline member 3 throughout its entire extent.
  • Electroconductive film 5 (as deposited in any desired configuration to constitute for example a printed circuit or portion thereof) is deposited in intimate contact with black insulating layer 4.
  • a conductor lead wire 8 is attached to or made integral with conductor film 5.
  • Leads, 7 and 7 are attached to bus bars in contact with the transparent tin oxide electroconductive film 2 at the leftand right-hand sides, respectively, thereof.
  • the visual chromatic image corresponding to the configuration of printed circuit electroconductive film 5 appears to the viewer through the protective layer 1 and transparent electroconductive film 2, thereby exhibiting a colored image, the first, second (potential on) and third (potential off) chromatic states of which will depend upon the composition of the selected cholesteric liquid crystal material or mixtures thereof.
  • this invention allows storage of. information until desired followed by erasure followed by imposition of new, e.g., updated information all accomplished electronically on a one-shot basis without the necessity for continuous electronic output during either storage or erasure.
  • FIG. 4 illustrates an article of the present invention wherein the field is established by electrons attracted to the surface of the cholesteric liquid crystalcontaining film.
  • a matrix of conductive elements, 5 is supported on insulator, e.g., fiberglass substrate in a vacuum tube 9 with a transparent viewing port or face plate 10.
  • the conductive elements are held at a positive potential by means of connecting the leads 13 to a potential source (not shown).
  • a current is passed through thin, non-transparent resistive wire 12, so that it is heated and emits electrons.
  • the electrons are drawn to the surface of the liquid crystal film 3, directly over the positively charged. conductive elements.
  • the field formed between the surface electrons and the conductive elements causes the liquid crystal to change color.
  • the pattern will remain until erased by heating to the isotropic transition temperature. This can be accomplished by means of any suitable energy source, e.g., heat lamp, heat .wires or passing a current through the conductive elements.
  • any suitable energy source e.g., heat lamp, heat .wires or passing a current through the conductive elements.
  • the device of FlG. 5 is a conventional cathode ray tube envelope 9 (C.R.T.) with a transparent conductor 2 coated on the inner surfaceof the transparent face plate 10.
  • a film 3 of a profusion of minute droplets of cholesteric liquid crystal confined in a polymeric matrix is coated in directcontact with the transparent electrode 2 on the inner surface of the face plate, and a black insulator film 4 is coated on the liquid crystal film.
  • the transparent electrode 2 is held at a positive potential via lead 7, and electrons from the electron gun 14 are caused by suitable deflection techniques to impinge on the black insulator in the desired pattern.
  • the local fields set up between the electrons at the insulator and the front electrode cause the liquid crystal to change color in those areas forming a visual pattern when viewed from the front of the tube.
  • the pattern is semi-permanent and one sweep of the electron beam will suffice to establish a permanent image.
  • This image a can be erased by heating the liquid crystal above its isotropic transition temperature. A suitable way to do this is to pass a current through the transparent electrode as described in the previous illustration.
  • a conventional CRT. is pre pared with a multitude of conductive wires, 15 extending through theface plate 10 and flush with the outer surface on the face plate.
  • a black insulating film 4 is formed on the face plate and the liquid crystal film member 3 is coated on the insulator.
  • a transparent protective outer plate 1 upon which a transparent conductive electrode 2 has been deposited is brought in contact with the liquid crystal film with the conductive surface in closest proximity to the liquid crystal member.
  • the transparent electrode 2 is held at a positive potential via lead 7.
  • the electrons from the electron gun 14 are deflected by any suitable conventional technique such that they describe a pattern on the inner surface of the CRT. face plate.
  • the electrons striking the wires 15 are drawn to the insulator film 4 and local fields are established across the liquid crystal film 3 between the charged wires 15 and the outer transparent electrode 2.
  • the liquid crystal in these areas will demonstrate a color change visible to the viewing agency, A.
  • the black insulating layer is often used to-absorb light transmitted through the liquid crystalfilm and thereby increase the contrast of the liquid crystal colors.
  • This light absorbing layer is not always necessary for adequate contrast in this type of a CRT. display device however.
  • transparent electroconductive coating 2 e.g., tin oxide
  • transparent protective element 1 which also serves as a substrate or support for the coating.
  • Bus bars 7, 7 are attached along the edges of coating 2 and have conductive leads L, L, respectively, attached thereto.
  • Opaque, e.g., black, non-reflective insulator film 4 has a layer or film 3 containing a profusion of minute droplets of cholesteric liquid crystal material confined within a polymeric matrix deposited thereon.
  • Resistive conductor elements 5 can be deposited directly on insulator 4, or on a lower supportive and protective layer (not shown), such as layer 6 of H0. 1.
  • the cholesteric liquid crystal member 3 is positioned in contiguous or closely spaced relationship to coating 2.
  • Each resistive element 5 has a pair of leads 8, 8' attached thereto, thus enabling each resistive element 5 to be operable separately or in groups, e.g., by appropriate conventional switching.
  • Resistive elements 5 can be formed, or deposited, in any desired configuration or design.
  • the device of FIG. 6 has two primary modes of operation (A) and (B), as follows: A. Field effect mode of operation with image storage and erasure An electric field is applied across the liquid crystal film by a potential applied to the top conductive coating 2 and any one or more of the resistive elements 5. The liquid crystal transforms to the second chromatic state in the area of electric field imposition.
  • the remaining resistive elements can be heated or the entire display unit can be heated by passing a current through the top conductive coating 2 to effect erasure.
  • This mode of operation is more complex for dynamic display but has the advantage that the field can be applied to all the resistive elements at one time and individual switches to these elements are not required.
  • the device is operated thermally in the following manner:
  • one of the leads 8, 8' is connected to a high voltage source (not shown),
  • the device of PK 7 is. in effect, a display device having polychromatic capability for chromatically representing an optionally comparatively permanent (third chromatic state) yet ther mally erasable configuration established by an electric field in optional conjunction with an independently operable yet thermally erasable transient, thermally operable, separate display means
  • said device comprises a transparent support (1); a transparent, electroconductive coating (2) on said support; conductive electrodes (7, 7') in contact with said coating and operatively connected by leads (L, L) to an electric field source; an insulator film (4) having a cholesteric liquid crystal member (3) in intimate proximityto said film and said coating; at least one electrically conductive resistive element (5) in thermally responsive association with said member, each said resistive element having a separate pair (8, 8') of conductive leads connected to a current source operable independently from said electric field source and wherein said cholesteric liquid crystal member is chromatically responsive to both an electric field and thermal energy applied thereto.
  • cholesteric liquid crystal members employed in accordance with this invention are comprised of a profusion of randomly shaped inclusions of cholesteric liquid crystal material dispersed in a substantially continuous solid polymeric matrix.
  • These members can be prepared readily by dispersing (emulsifying) minute droplets of cholesteric liquid crystal material in a dryable liquid solution of filmforming polymeric material and then coating, casting or otherwise depositing the solution upon the desired surface.
  • films, sheets, layers, etc. can be preformed, e.g., by casting, and then assembled into the composite structure at the desired time.
  • Coating and casting solutions can be prepared readily by adding the cholesteric liquid crystal compound or mixture to a solution, e.g., aqueous solution ot film-forming polymer matrix material, e.g., polyvinyl alcohol, using a stirrer, mixer, blender or equivalentagitation device until a liquid crystal droplet size range of from about five to about twenty microns is obtained.
  • This emulsion can be coated on the substrate directly, e.g., by means of a draw-down applicator, onto a blackened substrate, e.g., of Mylar (polyethylene glycol terephthalate) to a wet film thickness of about ten mils (0.0254 cm.) and air dried, e.g., at about 25 Centigrade. Filmthickness can be increased by repeated sequences of coating and drying.
  • the dried emulsion film can be stripped from its substrate and utilized as a preformed film which can be optionally opacified or blackened for. use in the articles of this invention.
  • Various mixtures of cholesteric liquid crystals can be used with various polymeric filmforming matrix materials.
  • films can be formed which contain from about 30 to about 95 weight per cent of cholesteric liquid crystal material, in droplet form, with the remainder being polymer matrix material Usually, however, the liquid crystal droplets represent from about 50 to about 90 weight per cent of the total film weight (droplets plus polymer matrix).
  • Layers cast from an emulsion of the liquid crystal material and then dried are dry to the touch (although containing liquid inclusions; are relatively unaffected by brushing contact with foreign bodies; are substantially immune to solute contamination, e.g., absorption of extraneous vapor; and are not subject to rapid deterioration by selective nucleation crystallization; and, in cases where crystallization does begin, it is stopped from further areawise development by a boundary of the polymer matrix.
  • Another feature of the incorporation of polymeric matrix bound droplets of cholesteric liquid crystalline materials into a system to provide an electric potentialactivated sensing or display device is the utilization of various mixtures of liquid crystals as to droplet size and chromatic response for indicating and/or displaying a wide range of specific levels of electric potential.
  • a system in one case, can comprise a plurality of layers, each layer comprising one, two or more types of droplets having different mixtures of chromatically responsive cholesteric liquid crystalline materials.
  • These devices can be tailor made to accomplish the desired task by variation of characteristics imparted thereto by any one of the following adjustments; (a) electric field response range; (b) size of the liquid crystal droplets; (c) type and thickness of the polymer matrix material; (d) specific composition of the cholesteric liquid crystalline material(s), and the like, all to the purpose of choosing a response suitable for a given proposed use.
  • Examples 1 4 Cholesteric members comprised of droplets of cholesteric liquid crystal material confined in substantially continuous solid polymer matrices are prepared using the below tabulated variety of specific matrix and liquid crystal materials.
  • 60 grams of cholesteric liquid crystal material is dispersed in 100 cubic centimeters of the aqueous polymer solution in a Waring blendor heated to 70 Centigrade by a heating jacket.
  • the various solutions were coated onto glass which was coated previously with tin oxide (in conventional manner).
  • the tin oxide coating is of a thickness corresponding to a resistivity of approximately 100 ohms per square.
  • a commercially available black lacquer is sprayed over the exposed surface of the liquid crystal-containing polymer matrix, and dried.
  • the black lacquer is Spray On No. 6223008, which contains carbon black in an insulating binder matrix.
  • Silver conductive paint is then applied to form an electrode on the black paint. and wiresareattached 9 tt. silver tt nsL E t n. oxide coating and connected to an alternating current source of electric potential (although ei t her alternating current or direct current can be utilized).
  • the resulting basic configuration is essentially the same as those shown in FIGS. 3 and 7.
  • the reflectance from the area over the silver electrode when viewed with incident white light shifts from green (first chromatic state) to blue (second chromatic state).
  • the reflectance does not return to the original green color, but instead assumes a grey appearance (third chromatic state), which is in very good chromatic and configurational contrast to the green background areas which are not subjected to the field.
  • Elvanol polymers are polyvinyl alcohols marketed by E. l. du Pont de Nemours & Company, Inc., Wilmington, Delaware. The differing numbers following the designation Elvanol indicate specific prod ucts having varying viscosities.
  • Elvannl 7124" os cjaracterozed bu tje fact tjat (a) a four per cent, by weight, aqueous solution has a viscosity of 23 to 24 centipoises at 25 centigrade. and (b) the material is 97.7 to 98.8 per cent
  • **Gelatin AE-4 is an acid extracted pigskin gelatin having a bloom strength of about 285 to about 305 grams and an isoelectric point of pH 8 to 9.
  • the information present in the display device can be erased by application of heat to attain the isotropic melting point of the liquid crystal mixture in ques tion, thus regenerating the entire film to its original green color (first chromatic state) when cooled again to room temperature.
  • Another way of regenerating the film is to regenerate it selectively by application of the heat or an electric current of sufficient intensity to raise the temperature to the isotropic melting point of the liquid crystal mixture in selected areas only. in such a case, electrical current is passed through those resistive elements whose chromatic representation or image is to be erased, causing the elements to be heated to the isotropic transition temperature.
  • the erasure of the chromatic image can be general (to regenerate the entire film) or'selective to a particular area thereof.
  • the electroconductive force or potential levels required to secure the second chromatic state and erasure of the third chromatic state will depend mainly upon the thickness of the cholesteric liquid crystalline member and the spacing of the conducting electrodes.
  • erasure can be achieved readily for 10 to 100 micron thick cholesteric liquid crystalline members by applying a potential of 100 to 500 volts across the conductive elements to heat the elements to the isotropic melting point of a given liquid crystal mixture.
  • a variant of the article of Example 2 is prepared by applying the liquid crystal droplet-polymer matrix emulsion coating on Mylar film, painting the uncoated side of the Mylar film black with Spray On No. 6223008" and pressing the liquid crystal dropletpolymer matrix side of the film to the tin oxide-coated glass.
  • the polyester (Mylar) film serves as an additional protective (barrier) film to protect the liquid crystal droplets, viz., additional to the polymer matrix.
  • additional protectivepolymeric materials can likewise be used.
  • the use of such a protective film is preferable as it reduces the difficulty sometimes encountered in painting. the silver or other electroconductive material directly on the liquid crystal dropletcontaining polymer matrix film.
  • Example 5 The procedure of Example 1 is repeated except using a Mylar protective film and a mixture of cholesteric liquid crystalline materials containing 73 weight per cent cholesteryl nonanoate and 27 weight per cent cholesteryl chloride.
  • a color change of from red (first chromatic state) to dull grey or black (second chromatic state) was observed. It should be noted here that the comparatively small amount of heat generated due to application of the electric field is insufficient to cause the liquid crystal to become liquid.
  • the color instantaneously changes from dull grey black to a dull red (third chromatic state). This third chromatic state is sufficiently sharp in contrast to that of the first chromatic state to enable clear distinction thereof to the naked eye.
  • Example 6 The procedure of Example I is repeated except using a protective Mylar" film and a cholesteric liquid crystalline mixture containing 79 weight per cent of cholesteryl nonanoate, 14 per cent of cholesteryl chloride and 7 weight per cent of oleyl cholesteryl carbonate.
  • EXAMPLE 7 Twenty-five copper plates 1 cm. X 2 cm. X 0.25 cm. are bonded to a plastic substrate in an evenly spaced 5 row 5 column matrix. Each of the plates is soldered to a conductive lead wire extending through the substrate. The copper plates are sprayed with an insulating black lacquer and a film of matrix confined-liquid crystal droplets prepared in accordance with Example 6 is coated on the lacquer to a thickness of about 100 microns.
  • the assembly is mounted in a vacuum chamber which is equipped with a transparent plastic port (window) such that the liquid crystal-containing film is readily visible through the port.
  • the conductivelead wires are connected to vacuum tight electrical feedthroughs in a plate at the opposite end of the vacuum chamber from the transparent port.
  • a tungsten wire is mounted about two inches in front of the matrix (as noted, e.g., in FlG. 4) and connected to a direct current power supply.
  • the chamber is pumped down to l X 10 6 Torr vacuum and a current of about 3.5 amps are passed through the tungsten wire causing it to glow red.
  • a current of about 3.5 amps are passed through the tungsten wire causing it to glow red.
  • a liquid crystal display utilizing a conventional cathode ray tube (C.R.T.) output is prepared in the following manner.
  • the target face of the tube is coated on the interior surface with a transparent electrode.
  • a polymer matrix-bound film of field responsive cholesteric liquid crystal droplets (a s in Example 6 is coated in contact with the transparent electrode as shown in FIG. 5 followed by application of a protective Mylar film.
  • a black insulating lacquer film is sprayed on the Mylar film.
  • the black film is used to absorb light transmitted through the liquid crystal film in order to enhance the contrast of color or shade of color scattered from the liquid crystals.
  • this black insulator film is probably optional with this device.
  • the tube After coating of the black film, the tube is pumped down to suitable vacuum and can be operated as a conventional video tube.
  • the transparent electrode on the face plate is held as a positive potential and the electron beam is caused to trace the desired pattern on the liquid crystalcontaining film.
  • the local fields set up between the electrons trapped at the interior surface of the liquid crystal (or black insulator) and the positively charged transparent electrode cause the liquid crystals to change color in those areas and form a visible pattern which may be observed through the face plate and the transparent electrode.
  • the pattern is optionally comparatively permanent, viz., subject to erasure, and one sweep of the electron beam will suffice to establish the image.
  • This image can be erased generally or selectively (in certain areas thereof) by heating the liquid crystal to its isotropic transition temperature.
  • the color shade changes are the same as noted above in Example 7.
  • the electron beam can be of much lower energy than normally required for stimulation of a phosphor (most often used for C.R.T. imaging).
  • the liquid crystal image depends on reflected light and therefore is best observed under strong exterior illumination a condition under which the standard phosphor coating is of marginal performance.
  • strong color contrasts are achievable with the present invention in strong daylight versus very weak color contrasts with conventional phosphors at the same conditions.
  • EXAMPLE 9 This device is similar in many respects to that described under Example 8 except that the liquid crystal containing, polymer matrix bound film is applied to the exterior of the CRT.
  • the face plate of the C .R.T. is prepared with a matrix of closely spaced conductive wires imbedded in it with one end of the wires exposed to the interior of the tube and the other end flush to the exterior surface of the face plate, as shown in FIG. 6.
  • the exterior surface is painted with a black insulating film if desired, and then a film of cholesteric liquid crystal (as in Example 6 is coated on the black insulator followed byoptional application of a protective Mylar film.
  • a transparent plate with a transparent electrode coated on its surface is attached to the tube with the conducting surface in contact with either the protective Mylar film (if used) or the liquid crystal film.
  • the transparent electrode is charged positively and the CRT is operated in a conventional manner such that an electron beam strikes the wire ends extending through the face plate in the pattern desired.
  • the electrons are conducted through the individual wires of the face plate to the surface of the cholesteric liquid crystal containing film which exhibits a color change in the areas between the wires which have been charged by the electron beam and the positively charged transparent electrode in the same manner as noted above in Example 7.
  • a cathode ray tube display device comprising a cathode ray tube having a face plate portion with an inner face; an interiorly located, electron emitting surface facing said inner face; a cholesteric liquid crystal member comprised of a profusion of individual, naked droplets of cholesteric liquid crystal material, chromatically responsive to an electric field, confined in a substantially continuous solid polymer matrix and located between said inner face and said electron emitting surface; a transparent electrode positioned between said cholesteric liquid crystal member and said inner face and an opaque insulating film positioned between said electron emitting surface and said cholesteric liquid crystal member.
  • a cathode ray tube display device as in claim wherein said droplets have an average size ranging from about 5 to about 20 microns and are uniformly distributed within said polymeric matrix.
  • a cathode ray tube display device comprising a cathode ray tube having a face plate portion with an outer face and an electron emitting surface located interiorly, a plurality of electron conducting elements extending through said face plate portion and in electric field imposing proximity to a cholesteric liquid crystal member comprised of a profusion of individual, naked droplets of cholesteric liquid crystal material, chromatically responsive to an electric field, confined in a substantially continuous solid polymer matrix and positioned in a generally parallel relationship with the outer face of said face plate portion, and a transparent electrode positioned generally parallel to yet externally of said cholesteric liquid crystal member.
  • a cathode ray tube display device as in claim 3 which includes a substantially transparent protective covering for said substantially transparent electrode.
  • a cathode ray tube display device as in claim 3 which includes an opaque contrasting background positioned intermediate said outer face of said face plate portion and said cholesteric liquid crystal member.

Abstract

This disclosure is directed to articles of manufacture, chiefly display devices, containing minute ''''naked'''' droplets or inclusions of cholesteric liquid crystal material in a substantially continuous polymeric matrix, said liquid crystal material changing color or shade of color not only upon application of an electric potential but also upon removal of the field. The image produced has a comparable outline to that of the path of the electric field. Three chromatic states are evident, the normal color (before the electric potential is applied), the color given off when the electric field is applied, and the color observed when the electric field is removed. All three chromatic states are readily discernible from one another. The polymer matrix protects the cholesteric liquid crystal droplets from aging and enhances electric field behavior because the third chromatic state (electric potential removed) has a greater longevity with the matrix-bound material versus unprotected material of identical composition but no polymeric matrix. Other advantages are also discussed.

Description

aso ase Prune mite States Churchill et a1.
Inventors: Donald Churchill, Kettering; James V. Cartmell, Dayton, both of Ohio Assignee: The National Cash Register Company, Dayton, Ohio Filed: Aug. 21, 1972 Appl. No.: 282,881
Related US. Application Data Division of Ser. No. 132,884, April 9, 1971, Pat. No. 3,734,597, which is a division of Ser. No. 707,706, Feb. 23, 1968,
11.5. C1 313/91, 313/68 A, 313/68 D, 313/89, 350/160 LC Int. Cl. 1101,] 29/12 Field of Search 313/89, 68 D, 68 A, 91; 350/160 LC, 161
References Cited UNITED STATES PATENTS 3/1942 Von Ardenne 313/91 7/1942 Donal, .lr. 313/91 X 5/1971 Dodds 350/160 LC 12/1971 Fergason 350/160 LC l/l973 Wysocki 350/160 LC 1 June 11, 1974 R22.734 3/1946 Rosenthal 313/91 X Primary Examiner-Archie R. Borchelt Assistant Examiner-Saxfield Chatmon, Jr.
Attorney, Agent, or Firm-E. Frank McKinney; Robert .1. Shafer ABSTRACT This disclosure is directed to articles of manufacture, chiefly display devices, containing minute naked" droplets or inclusions of cholesteric liquid crystal material in a substantially continuous polymeric matrix, said liquid crystal material changing color or shade of color not only upon application of an electric potential but also upon removal of the field. The image pro duced has a comparable outline to that of the path of the electric field. Three chromatic states are evident, the normal color (before the electric potential is applied), the color given off when the electric field is applied, and the color observed when the electric field is removed. All three chromatic states are readily discernible from one another. The polymer matrix protects the cholesteric liquid crystal droplets from aging and enhances electric field behavior because the third chromatic state (electric potential removed) has a greater longevity with the matrix-bound material versus unprotected material of identical composition but no polymeric matrix. Other advantages are also discussed.
5 Claims, 7 Drawing Figures ammaa PAIENTEQJUN I i m4 FIG. 5
FIG. 2
FIG
FIG. 4
FIG. 6
DISPLAY DEVECE CGMPSHNG A PQFUMON F NAKED DRUPLETS 0F CHOLESTERHC LEQUHD CRYSTAL TN A SUBSTANTIALLY CONTINUOUS LYMERHC MATRHX This is a division of application Ser. No. 132,884, filed Apr. 9, 1971, now U.S. Pat. No. 3,734,597 which is a division of application Ser. No. 707,706, filed Feb. 23, 1968.
The present invention is directed to an article of manufacture for utilizing an electric field to obtain an easily-discernible, stable, and optionally either comparatively permanent or readily heat-eraseable chromatic (color and/or reflectance, viz., reflective intensity) representation of comparable outline to said electric field. Since the chromatic representation is stable, it can serve a storage (memory) function. One of the particularly advantageous features of the present invention is that the chromatic representation can be generated by a one-shot signal output, viz., an electronic computer output signal, a single sweep signal such as a radar scan, a display panel where information may be entered once for an extended period storage such as an air terminal schedule display.
Furthermore, the chromatic representation in the color stable (storage) state is capable of representing a fixed body or state of information which can be retrieved and examined readily without requiring continuous electric field potential, e.g., continuous potential such as that obtained from an electron gun, e.g., cathode ray tube, using conventional electronic computer equipment.
The article of this invention comprises, in its essential components, a pair of spaced electrodes with a matrixbound, droplet-containing cholesteric liquid crystalline member located in such a position that the electrodes impose an electric potential on said liquid cyrstal member. Usually the electrodes are positioned such that the first electrode (the electrode closer to the viewing agency, e.g., eyes of the viewer) and second electrode (the electrode more remote from the viewing agency, e.g., viewer's eyes) are in electric field-generating proximity to one another and the intermediate chloresteric liquid crystalline member can, but need not, be in contact with the first and/or second electrode. Both direct current and alternating current can be employed to produce the electric field. The cholesteric liquid crystalline member can be composed of a single substantially continuous polymer matrix-bound, naked droplet or inclusion of cholesteric liquid crystalline material, but usually said member is composed of a plurality (and preferably a profusion) of individual, minute, naked droplets or inclusions of cholesteric liquid crystalline material. The term liquid crystal, as used herein, is employed in the generic, art-recognized sense to mean the state of matter often referred to as a mesophase, wherein the material exhibits flow properties associated with a liquid state but demonstrates long range ordering characteristics of a crystal. The cholesteric liquid crystal refers to a particular type of mesophase most often demonstrated by esters of cholesterol. Many of the cholesteric liquid crystals exhibit a reflective scattering of light giving them an iridescent appearance. The polymer matrix-bound cholesteric liquid crystalline droplet-containing member can be, and usually is, composed of droplets of a mixture of materials which form a cholesteric liquid crystal. The term naked as used herein refers to the fact that the droplets of liquid crystal material have no covering except for the polymeric matrix in which they are located. insofar as the large majority of droplets are concerned, the polymer matrix is continuous, that is to say that the internally located droplets are totally enveloped by a given portion of the matrix. Many of the droplets located close to the outer surface(s) of the matrix are likewise in a continuous matrix of polymer material. Some of the droplets are on the surface or a portion thereof has direct access to the open air through an opening(s) in the polymer matrix. The term substantially continuous" accurately describes the polymer matrix which contains the vast majority of liquid crystal droplets. At least one of the materials in the cholesteric liquid crystalline phase must be chromatically responsive to an electric field of the requisite intensity. Moreover, so long as the cholesteric liquid crystalline member is located intermediate (between) the electic fieldimposing electrodes, the direction at which the field is applied to said member, viz., perpendicular or essentially parallel to the direction of viewing is immaterial.
While the first and second electrodes need not be (and usually are not) coextensive throughout their entire extent and the cholesteric liquid crystalline member need not be in direct contact with either or both electrodes; it is necessary for both the first and second electrodes to be close enough to one another and to the intermediate cholesteric liquid crystalline member to enable the formation of an electric field between the first and second electrodes. For most purposes, the cholesteric liquid crystalline member contains a cholesteric liquid crystalline material which is chromatically responsive to an electric field of from about l0,000 to about 1,000,000 volts per centimeter of thickness of the cholesteric liquid crystalline droplet-containing member. By chromatically responsive is meant that the cholesteric liquid crystalline material (present in droplet form in the substantially continuous polymer matrix defining the cholesteric liquid crystalline member) must exhibit either an apparent change in color and/or reflective intensity (as viewed from incident white light) upon application of an electrical field of the above specified requisite intensity thereto. Hence the term chromatic response is intended to include both changes (shift of wavelength) in color and changes in intensity of reflectance of the same color so that it appears different in color or shade of color from the previous color state(s). Thus, as used herein, a change in color is synonymous with a change in reflective intensity and vice versa. The term apparent is employed to denote that the color effect induced or brought about by the electric field, or subsequent to its application, is different from the pre-existing (natural) color or absence thereof present in the liquid crystals, per se. Usually the electric field employed will have an intensity ranging from about 20,000 to 200,000 volts per centimeter of thickness of the encapsulated cholesteric liquid crystalline member.
In addition to protecting the droplets of cholesteric liquid crystal material, the substantially continuous polymeric matrix enables better adhesion between the cholesteric liquid crystal member and the first and second electrodes or comparable contiguous surfaces. Also, the presence of the polymeric matrix (which can be controlled to be of uniform and accurate thickness) serves to enhance the optical homogeneity of the chromatic representation (image) observed in the display device.
CHOLESTERIC LlQUlD CRYSTAL MEMBER While most, if not all, cholesteric liquid crystal materials exhibit chromatic response to electric potential; different cholesteric liquid crystals, and mixtures thereof, respond in varying chromatic contrasts at different electric potential intensity levels. Of course, all changes in shades of color are not equally discernible to the naked eye. For this reason and others, e.g., blindness to certain colors and shades of colors; it is within the purview of this invention to use specific color filters and optical sensors to aid in detection of subtle changes in shades of color and convert these subtle changes to more clearly recognizable ones. Hence, while all cholesteric liquid crystals are not equal in chromatic response to electric potential for display purposes when the display is viewed by the naked eye; deficiencies in clearly observable contrast can be compensated for. Nevertheless, for most visual display devices it is preferable to employ cholesteric liquid crystals whose chromatic response is both clearly discernible to the naked eye andin sharp chromatic contrast to its preceding color state.
When an electric field is imposed on the matrix entrapped droplets of cholesteric liquid crystal material, the liquid crystals change color (or reflective intensity) substantially instantaneously to 80 milliseconds) to shift from a first chromatic state (that normal color state existing prior to the application of an electric field thereto) to a second chromatic state, viz., the chromatic state existing due to the presence of the electric potential. The second chromatic state demonstrates a color (or reflective intensity) different from that of the first chromatic state, and this difference is preferably readily recon gizable to the naked eye. Upon removal of the electric field, the color changes from the second chromatic state to a third chromatic state and the color (or reflective intensity) exhibited by the liquid crystal material in the third chromatic state is different from that of the color given off in the second chromatic state and first chromatic state, respectively.
A very unusual and advantageous feature of a preferred embodiment of the present invention resides in the fact that the third chromatic state displays a stability and permanence color-wise, viz., it does not readily fade" back to the first'chromatic state. Compared with unprotected cholesteric liquid crystals, the matrix entrapped cholestoric liquid crystal droplets have the ability to retain the third chromatic state in most cases for at least several orders of magnitude of the time longer than the unprotected material. This retention ability can be employed in storing information for future use.
An example of the difference between the color or reflective intensity between the three chromatic states spoken of hereinabove can be gleaned from the following illustrative example. Using the mixture of cholesteric liquid crystalline materials noted below in Example 1, an original or first chromatic state which is a green color is observed to the naked eye. Then, when the electric potential is applied so as to create an electric field between the first and second electrodes, the second chromatic state produced is a blue-green color quite distinct in appearance to the naked eye from the first chromatic state. Then, when the electric field potential is removed, a third chromatic state is produced which is, to the naked eye, a grey color, which is quite distinct in appearance from both the green of the first chromatic state and the blue-green of the second chromatic state.
Suitable chromatically responsive cholesteric liquid crystal materials include, but are not limited to, the following: cholesteryl halides, e.g., cholesteryl chloride, cholesteryl bromide and cholesteryl iodide; cholesteryl nitrate and other mixed esters of cholesterol and inorganic acids; cholesteryl esters of saturated and unsaturated, substituted and unsubstituted organic acids, esp. cholesteryl esters of C, to C aliphatic, monocarboxylic acids, e.g., cholesteryl nonanoate, cholesteryl crotonate, cholesteryl cholorformate, cholesteryl chlorodecanoate, cholesteryl chloroeicosanoate, cholesteryl butyrate, cholesteryl caprate, cholesteryl oleate, cholesteryl linolate, cholesteryl linolenate, cholesteryl laurate, cholesteryl erucate, cholesteryl myristate, cholesteryl clupanodonate, oleyi cholesteryl carbonate, cholesteryl heptyl carbamate, decyl cholesteryl carbonate; cholesteryl esters of unsubstituted or halogenated aryl, -alkenaryl, -aralkenyl, -alkaryl and -aralkyl organic acids, especially cholesteryl esters of those organic acids containing an aromatic moiety and from 7 to l9 carbon atoms, such as, cholesteryl pchlorobenzoate, cholesteryl cinnamate; cholesteryl ethers, e.g., cholesteryl decyl ether, cholesteryl lauryl ether, cholesteryl oleyl ether, etc.
As mentioned above comparatively pure, chromaticallyelectric potential responsive cholesteric liquid crystalline material, viz., individual chromatically responsive compounds, can be used; or the chromatically-electric potential responsive materials can be used in admixture. The use of such mixtures is actually preferable in many cases because with mixtures the liquid crystalline state can be maintained more readily at ambient room temperatures without requiring extraneous heating. On the other hand when an individual chromatically responsive compound is employed, it is frequently necessary to heat the immediate environment (where the device is to be employed) in order to maintain the material in the liquid crystal state because many such materials are solids at ambient roomtemperatures. For most applications the chloro derivatives are preferred due to their ability to produce color changes (or shifts in reflective intensity) readily recognizable to the naked eye especially in the second and third chromatic states mentioned hereinabove. Some exemplary mixtures of cholesteric liquid crystal materials which can be employed in accordance with this invention include, but are not limited to, the following: cholesteryl nonanoate, cholesteryl chloride and cholesteryl cinnamate; cholesteryl nonanoate and cholesteryl chloride; cholesteryl nonanoate and cholesteryl bromide; cholesteryl nonanoate, cholesteryl bromide and cholesteryl cinnamate; cholesteryl nonanoate, cholesteryl iodide and cholesteryl cinnamate; cholesteryl nonanaote, cholesteryl iodide and cholesteryl benzoate; cholesteryl nonanoate, cholesteryl chloride and oleyl cholesteryl carbonate; cholesteryl nonanoate, cholesteryl chloride, oleyl cholesteryl carbonate and cholesteryl bromide; oleyl cholesteryl carbonate and cholesteryl iodide, oleyl cholesteryl carbonate and cholesteryl pchloro benzoate; etc.
Also, it should be understood that included within the term cholesteric liquid crystalline mixtures are mixtures of two or more individual materials, one ormore of which individually does not form a cholesteric liquid crystal phase but which in admixture exhibit a cholesteric liquid crystal phase. Hence, two or three materials which individually are not cholesteric liquid crystals can be employed in accordance with this invention if, when in admixture, they do exhibit cholesteric liquid crystal behavior, viz., they form a mesophase which demonstrates the property of reflection light scattering. One such mixture is cholesteryl nonanoate, oleyl cholesteryl carbonate and cholesterol. The latter material, by itself, does not form a cholesteric liquid crystalline phase; but does so in combination with the other cholesteric materials.
Various natural and synthetic film-forming polymeric materials can be employed to constitute the polymeric matrix, film or coating in which the individual droplets or inclusions of cholesteric liquid crystal material are located. Any transparent or substantially transparent film-forming polymeric material with adequate electrical insulation properties and which is soluble in a liquid which does not dissolve or substantially chemically affect the liquid crystal material adversely can be used. Suitable representative film-forming polymeric materials for this purposeinclude, but are not limited to, the following: polyvinyl alcohol; gelatin, gum arabic, zein, a prolamine film former derived from the alcohol extraction of zea mays, a grain commonly called lndian corn; hydroxy ethyl cellulose; polyvinyl pyrrolidone; polyethylene oxide; copolymers of ethylene and maleic anhydride; copolymers of vinyl methyl ether and maleic anhydride; etc. The cholesteric liquid crystals can be dispersed or positioned within the polymer matrix conveniently by emulsifying minute droplets of liquid crystal material in a dryable liquid solution of the filmforming polymeric material which is to constitute the polymer matrix. According to a preferred embodiment of this invention, the droplets of liquid crystal material are emulsified in an aqueous solution of film-forming polymer. Since an extremely small droplet size of cholesteric liquid crystal material can be maintained in an emulsion, coatings of films prepared therefrom allow a good optical resolution and have a smooth surface(s). These characteristics enhance the optical or visual readout of display devices containing the droplets in the matrix. In general individual droplet size can range from about 0.5 to about 50 microns, but usually the individual droplet size ranges from about 1 to about 30 microns. Average droplet size can range from about I to 30 microns but usually ranges from about 5 to about 20 microns. Films prepared by drying these emulsions, containing the minute individual liquid crystal droplets or inclusions, can be stained ortinted as desired to enable the polymer matrix to serve as a color filter for light traveling to and from the liquid crystal material. Such a system can be used where a narrowing of the broad iridescent effect present in some liquid crystal materials in the second and third chromatic states is desired. Moreover, such films can also be pigmented slightly, but care should be exercised to avoid use of an excessive amount of pigment or other non-light reflecting material as it can diminish the color response and brilliance due to interference with incident and reflected light.
Comparative tests between polymer matrixprotected cholesteric liquid crystal materials versus films of unprotected liquid crystal materials of identical composition reveal several important advantages for the films comprised of droplets of cholesteric liquid crystal material in a substantially continuous polymer matrix when employed in the articles of this invention. One of the major advantages resides in the apparent prevention of crystallization of the liquid crystals and mixtures thereof, or at least a diminution in the tendency towards crystallization. Hence, many cholesteric liquid crystal materials and mixtures are normally solid at room temperature. These mixtures often super-cool considerably so that crystallization is not immediate at ambient room temperatures. However, they do crystallize within a day or a longer time period and must be reheated to the liquid crystal transition temperature range in order to be suitable for display, for example in chromatic image recognition use. The dispersion of these mixtures in the polymer matrix seems to inhibit crystallization, and the cholesteric liquid crystal materials when dispersed within said polymer matrix are observed to remain in the liquid crystal state for a longer period of time than pure films of the same materials (no' polymer matrix).
Another advantage attainable in the articles of the present invention is the ability of the matrix-entrapped material to retain the third chromatic state for comparatively permanent periods of time versus the comparatively transitory retention of the third chromatic state in the case of unrestrained cholesteric liquid crystals.
A further and equally important practical advantage of use of the matrix-retained droplets of cholesteric liquid crystals is their ability to be used in multicomponent (multi-color) systems, viz., as coatings or incorporated in a matrix containing a plurality of different cholesteric liquid crystalline mixtures, each mixture giving a characteristic color throughout the three chromatic stages referred to hereinabove with the different mixtures being employed in close proximity so that a multi-colored display is achieved in one, two or all three chromatic states. Moreover, polychromatic displays can be achieved by using a plurality of switched leads or contacts. In one case, some switches can be turned on and the others left off which creates a polycolored efiect using differently colored mixtures or one mixture. Another way to achieve such an effect is to use a plurality of mixtures each of which is responsive at a different level of intensity of field potential to exhibit a different apparent color or shade of color. Yet another way of achieving the polychromatic displays is to have some switches turned on and-then turn a portion of them off so that some switches are on, and some switches are off (neverhaving been turned on) some of which were previously on. This works well with a single cholesteric liquid crystal material, one mixture or a plurality of differently colored mixtures.
A still further advantage of the articles of the present invention include their processing flexibility in that a wider range of devices can be prepared to meet a wider range of specifications. For example, electric field sensitive display devices utilizing polymer matrixretained cholesteric liquid crystal droplets can be prepared to be either flat or curved, and either rigid or flexible. In the case of pure cholesteric liquid crystal films, for all practical purposes they require two flat, rigid, evenlyspaced electrodes. Of course, these use-limiting requirements are not applicable to the matrix-retained products because the substantially-continuous polymer matrix furnishes the uniform support to the extent required, yet can be flexible enough to accommodate complex shapes. Yet another advantage attendant to the articles of this invention is that the polymer matrix not only protects the cholesteric liquid crystalline material, e.g., from deleterious orientation and other adverse surface effects, but due to the extremely small droplet size which can be maintained in an emulsion also substantially supplies a uniform thickness to the film thereof since the coating provides the droplets in a condition of roughly uniform diameter. This results in smooth coatings of good optical resolution.
Until recently the utility of cholesteric liquid crystals was limited due to disadvantages, including the following ones:
1. Some systems containing a mixture of one or more intermingled cholesteric liquid crystal compounds, as a film, are subject to crystallization of large areas at the desired working temperatures. This undesirable crystallization tends to concentrate one of the active materials at each crystallization site to thereby separate it from the other components of such a mixture. in turn, component separation results in loss of precision and efficiency of color change;
2. Most cholesteric liquid crystal materials which are chromatically responsive to an electric field are cholesterol derivatives which are oily liquids at and above their melting temperatures. When they exist as a film on any surface, the film (being wet) is subject to injury and contamination, e.g., from aging and contact with the environment. Thus, dust particles are easily entrapped by the liquid surface and can serve as undesirable nucleation sites for crystallization. Also 'such films are exposed to contact with any material in the vicinity with resultant disorganization and possible change of thickness in localized areas thereby altering chromatic response;
3. The flow of such liquid crystal films between electrodes;
4. The formation of bubbles due to electrical breakdown of the cholesteric liquid crystal material;
5. Non-uniform optical and electrical surface effects exhibited at the electrodes, e.g., orientation at the surface of the cholesteric liquid crystal film. The present invention overcomes or alleviates most, if not all, of these problems.
The total (overall) thickness of the cholesteric liquid crystalline member can range from about 0.001 to about 0.05 centimeters (not counting the thickness of any optional protective film applied thereto). Usually the film thickness of the cholesteric liquid crystalline member ranges from about 0.003 to about 0.01 centimeters and preferably from about 0.005 to about 0.0] centimeters. The film can be of a thickness to include only a single layer or a few layers of liquid crystal droplets, or the film can include a larger number of layers thereof, within its thickness.
First Electrode While both electrodes can be composed of nontransparent material or presented in non-transparent form (note FIG. 4); it is usually preferable that the first electrode by transparent. In such cases the first electrode can be formed of any transparent electroconductive material. For practical considerations, it is usually desirable to form the transparent first electrode as thin as possible, in order to obtain a combination of maximum transparency and yet retain electrical continuity of the electrode. According to a preferred embodiment of this invention, the transparent first electrode can be composed of transparent metal or metal oxide films, coatings or other electro-conductive layers. Suitable metal and metal oxide materials which can be employed for this purpose include, but are not limited to, the following: tin oxide, gold, platinum, chromium, nickel. ln the case of metallic materials, transparent film can be made by using very thin homogeneous coatings or preparing a series of very thin, closely spaced ribbons of the metal by photoetching away percent or more of the material. A more comprehensive listing of suitable transparent metal and metal oxide electric conductive films can be found in US. Pat. No. 2,628,927 to Colbert et al., the disclosure of which is incorporated herein by reference. The deposition of the transparent electrode can be upon a protective inorganic, e.g., glass, or organic, e.g., acrylate or alkyl acrylate polymer plastic or other polymeric protective base material, which then constitutes the upper or viewing surface through which the cholesteric liquid crystalline members chromatic response to the electric potential is viewed. Various transparent plastic and resinous protective layers can be first provided with a transparent electro-conductive layer by known coating or deposition techniques, such as e.g., those indicated in any one of the following US. Pat. Nos. 2,704,265; 2,739,083; 2,740,732; 2,750,832; 2,904,450; 2,907,672; 3,001,901 and 3,020,376. During assembly the transparent first electrode is placed in direct contact with the cholesteric liquid crystalline member. Other suitable exemplary procedures for depositing electro-conductive coatings upon the glass or plastic base include thermal sputtering or evaporative coating using metal halide solutions from a vacuum to which oxygen is then applied in order to oxidize the metal halide salt and form the metal oxide film in situ upon the desired base material. Other satisfactory conventional techniques are used when forming metal coatings, e.g., by chemical reduction, viz., coating a metal salt solution containing a reducing agent to reduce the metal salt to yield the metal film (one step procedure) or coating a metal salt onto the base, followed by a second coating using a solution containing a reducing agent (two step procedure), the latter procedure being similar to that used to form silver mirror films. Other satisfactory coating procedures will be ap' parent to those skilled in the art. When-the first electrode is non-transparent, e.g., in the form of a thin, electron-emitting, resistive wire(s) as in FIG. 4; the wire(s) can be positioned so as not to obstruct or interfere substantially with the observed image.
SECOND ELECTRODE The second electrode can be composed of any electroconductive material and need not be transparent;
nor need it be coextensive with the first electrode throughout its entire extent; In fact, usually the second electrode is neither transparent nor coextensive with the first electrode. For example, the second electrode can be imposed in the pattern of a printed circuit or it can have any desired configuration. Hence, the second electrode can be deposited in transparent, nontransparent or partially transparent form, using such materials as copper, silver, gold, iron-containing metal alloys, carbon black, graphite, lead sulfide, etc.
In order to aid in viewing the chromatic representation produced upon the cholesteric liquid crystalline member through the imposition of the electric potential thereto, it has been found desirable to provide an opaque, e.g., black contrasting background behind the cholesteric liquid crystalline member, e.g., either in front of or behind the second electrode. The reason for this is that the chromatic change which the liquid crytals undergo is observable through light scattering, viz., the scattering of light through the strata of the liquid crystalline material. Hence, in order to observe the chromatic changes properly, it is most advisable to provide a black, light-absorbing background. That background can, itself, be an electrode, e.g., be prepared from black paints, black dye, etc., containing an electro-conductive component such as carbon black or black anodized metal. The black background is not always necessary however. Note the description in conjunction with FIG. 6 in this respect.
In many cases (e.g., FIGS. 2, 3, and 6), it is preferable to employ an insulating glass, plastic or other transparent or substantially transparent material as a protective layer on top of the transparent first electrode. Suitable materials from which protective protectivve layer can be made include, but are not limited to, the following Various types of glass and inorganic ceramics, such as conventional soda-lime-silica glass; lithia-soda-limesilica glass; potassia-sodalithia-alumina-silica glass, various organic glass and other transparent organic polymeric materials, such as the methacrylate and alkylmethacrylate and alkylacrylate plastics, e.g., polymethylmethacrylates, polyethylmethacrylates, polymethylacrylates, polyethyl acrylates, and other acrylic acid and methacrylic acid homo and copolymers. Other transparent or substantially transparent insulating protective materials suitable for use will be apparent to those skilled in the art.
In order to supply an electric potential to the first electrode and second electrode, it is practical and convenient to locate conductive elements (leads) in electro-conductive contact with both of said electrodes. Thus, one or more conductors will be located in direct contact with the first electrode and one or more other conductors will be in contact with and preferably located behind the second electrode. A protective layer of glass, plastic, or other electrically insulating material (not necessarily transparent) can be employed as a surfacing layer to protect that side of the article in close proximity to said second electrode and the conductive element(s) or leads in contact therewith.
ILLUSTRATIVE DEVICES The present invention will be understood in greater detail in conjunction with the attached drawings.
FIG. 1 of the drawings is a cross-sectional view through a liquid crystal member or component.
FIG. 2 is a cross-sectional view through one embodiment ofthe present invention which illustrates a display device.
FIG. 3 is likewise a cross-sectional view of an article of this invention illustrating an alternative display device.
FIG. 4 is a cross-sectional view of a vacuum tube display device wherein the field is supplied by electrons drawn to the surface of the liquid crystalline member.
FIG. 5 is a cross-sectional view through a cathode ray tube containing the structure of the present invention and serving as a display device.
FIG. 6 is a cross-sectional view of an alternative form of cathode ray tube utilizing the present invention.
FIG. 7 is a cross-sectional view of yet another device illustrative of this invention wherein both an electric field and thermal energy can be utilized to impose transient and/or comparatively permanent colored images on the same cholesteric liquid crystal member. Optionally selected images can be stored and others erased. Transient images (imposed by heat) can be changed at will on a stored image background of contrasting color.
FIG. 1 shows the presence of cholesteric liquid crystal member 3 comprised of a plurality of minute, individual, naked droplets or inclusions, a, of cholesteric liquid crystal material confined within a substantially continuous matrix, b, of polymeric material. The droplets have a random shape and are reasonably uniformly distributed (dispersed) within the polymer matrix. An optional thin, protective barrier film, e.g., poly ethylene glycol terephthalate Mylar polyester can be deposited on one or both major surfaces of liquid crystal member 3 to prevent deleterious solvation of surface located liquid crystal material, e.g., by a solvent component(s) such as may be contained in opaque lacquer film 4 of FIG. 2. As shown in FIG. 2, transparent (glass or plastic) insulating protective layer 1 is directly in contact with transparent first electrode 2 which in turn is in intimate contact with the cholesteric liquid crystalline member 3. The cholesteric liquid crystalline member is composed of an array or profusion of minute droplets, a, of cholesteric liquid crystalline material retained within a substantially continuous polymeric matrix, b, with or without a protective barrier film (not shown) on one or both sides thereof. In addition to enhancing the optical properties of the liquid crystalline member and protecting the droplets from deleterious exposure, the polymeric film, b, serves as an effective insulator between both of said electrodes. Next to the cholesteric liquid crystalline member 3 is located a black lacquer insulating film 4 to enhance the observation of the chromatic changes in the liquid crystalline member. Conductive elements 5 are located intermediate between lower protective layer 6 (usually glass or plastic) and black insulating film 4. While FIG. 2 shows three such elements, it should be clearly understood that any desired number can be used and the configuration thereof can be arranged in any desired display pattern, sequence or shape. Upper and lower electrodes (leads) 7 and 7, respectively allow the passage of an electric current from a suitable potential source (not shown) into electroconductive contact with both the first transparent electrode and the conductive elements 5. Upon subjecting the liquid crystalline member to the electric field by applying an electric potential across the leads 7, 7'; the chromatic representation viewed through the transparent layers of l and 2 will conform closely with the configuration defined by the field established between conductive elements 5 and the top electrode. That is to say that the configuration established by the elements 5 will be reproduced, but in different color or intensity of reflectance from the surrounding film areas when looking down through the transparent protective layer 1 and transparent first electrode 2. Upon opening the circuit, a further chromatic change takes place in the configuration areas wherein the cholesteric liquid crystalline material rapidly changes from the second chromatic state to the third chromatic state characterized by the ability of the cholesteric liquid crystalline member to retain a substantially permanent and different chromatic state for extended periods of time under normal atmospheric conditions of temperature and humidity. If desired, a sealer tape or potting compound (not shown) can be applied to the outer peripheral edge(s) to aid in sealing the various layers against lateral and interfacial exposure to the atmosphere at the peripheral edge surfaces.
P10. 3 illustrates an alternative display device and is comprised of transparent glass plate 1 in contact with transparent electroconductive film 2 which in turn is in contact with liquid crystalline member 3, which is composed of a profusion of minute cholesteric liquid crystal droplets or inclusions present in a retaining matrix of insulating polymeric film. Black insulating film 4 is deposited by coating on the cholesteric liquid crystalline member 3 throughout its entire extent. Electroconductive film 5 (as deposited in any desired configuration to constitute for example a printed circuit or portion thereof) is deposited in intimate contact with black insulating layer 4. A conductor lead wire 8 is attached to or made integral with conductor film 5. Leads, 7 and 7, are attached to bus bars in contact with the transparent tin oxide electroconductive film 2 at the leftand right-hand sides, respectively, thereof. Upon application of potential across the upper transparent electrode 2 and the lower electroconductive film 5 through the intermediate cholesteric liquid crystalline member 3, the visual chromatic image corresponding to the configuration of printed circuit electroconductive film 5 appears to the viewer through the protective layer 1 and transparent electroconductive film 2, thereby exhibiting a colored image, the first, second (potential on) and third (potential off) chromatic states of which will depend upon the composition of the selected cholesteric liquid crystal material or mixtures thereof. On passing a current through leads 7 and 7 through the upper tin oxide electrode, the upper electrode can be heated to the isotropic transition temperature of the cholesteric liquid crystals thereby erasing the image produced during the third chromatic state. Upon cooling to ambient room temperatures, the liquid crystals then return to their original (first) chromatic state. Hence, it will be seen that this invention allows storage of. information until desired followed by erasure followed by imposition of new, e.g., updated information all accomplished electronically on a one-shot basis without the necessity for continuous electronic output during either storage or erasure.
FIG. 4 illustrates an article of the present invention wherein the field is established by electrons attracted to the surface of the cholesteric liquid crystalcontaining film. A matrix of conductive elements, 5 is supported on insulator, e.g., fiberglass substrate in a vacuum tube 9 with a transparent viewing port or face plate 10. The conductive elements are held at a positive potential by means of connecting the leads 13 to a potential source (not shown). A current is passed through thin, non-transparent resistive wire 12, so that it is heated and emits electrons. The electrons are drawn to the surface of the liquid crystal film 3, directly over the positively charged. conductive elements. The field formed between the surface electrons and the conductive elements causes the liquid crystal to change color. As shown here, three lead elements are used but it is possible to use any desired number and configuration of elements to describe the pattern desired. After the potential is removed from the elements, 5, the pattern will remain until erased by heating to the isotropic transition temperature. This can be accomplished by means of any suitable energy source, e.g., heat lamp, heat .wires or passing a current through the conductive elements.
The device of FlG. 5 is a conventional cathode ray tube envelope 9 (C.R.T.) with a transparent conductor 2 coated on the inner surfaceof the transparent face plate 10. A film 3 of a profusion of minute droplets of cholesteric liquid crystal confined in a polymeric matrix is coated in directcontact with the transparent electrode 2 on the inner surface of the face plate, and a black insulator film 4 is coated on the liquid crystal film. The transparent electrode 2 is held at a positive potential via lead 7, and electrons from the electron gun 14 are caused by suitable deflection techniques to impinge on the black insulator in the desired pattern. The local fields set up between the electrons at the insulator and the front electrode cause the liquid crystal to change color in those areas forming a visual pattern when viewed from the front of the tube. The pattern is semi-permanent and one sweep of the electron beam will suffice to establish a permanent image. This image a can be erased by heating the liquid crystal above its isotropic transition temperature. A suitable way to do this is to pass a current through the transparent electrode as described in the previous illustration.
In the device of FIG. 6 a conventional CRT. is pre pared with a multitude of conductive wires, 15 extending through theface plate 10 and flush with the outer surface on the face plate. A black insulating film 4 is formed on the face plate and the liquid crystal film member 3 is coated on the insulator. A transparent protective outer plate 1 upon which a transparent conductive electrode 2 has been deposited is brought in contact with the liquid crystal film with the conductive surface in closest proximity to the liquid crystal member. The transparent electrode 2 is held at a positive potential via lead 7. The electrons from the electron gun 14 are deflected by any suitable conventional technique such that they describe a pattern on the inner surface of the CRT. face plate. The electrons striking the wires 15 are drawn to the insulator film 4 and local fields are established across the liquid crystal film 3 between the charged wires 15 and the outer transparent electrode 2. The liquid crystal in these areas will demonstrate a color change visible to the viewing agency, A.
As previously stated, the black insulating layer is often used to-absorb light transmitted through the liquid crystalfilm and thereby increase the contrast of the liquid crystal colors. This light absorbing layer is not always necessary for adequate contrast in this type of a CRT. display device however.
In the device of FlG. 7, transparent electroconductive coating 2, e.g., tin oxide, is deposited on transparent protective element 1, which also serves as a substrate or support for the coating. Bus bars 7, 7 are attached along the edges of coating 2 and have conductive leads L, L, respectively, attached thereto. Opaque, e.g., black, non-reflective insulator film 4 has a layer or film 3 containing a profusion of minute droplets of cholesteric liquid crystal material confined within a polymeric matrix deposited thereon. Resistive conductor elements 5 can be deposited directly on insulator 4, or on a lower supportive and protective layer (not shown), such as layer 6 of H0. 1. The cholesteric liquid crystal member 3 is positioned in contiguous or closely spaced relationship to coating 2. Each resistive element 5 has a pair of leads 8, 8' attached thereto, thus enabling each resistive element 5 to be operable separately or in groups, e.g., by appropriate conventional switching. Resistive elements 5 can be formed, or deposited, in any desired configuration or design. The device of FIG. 6 has two primary modes of operation (A) and (B), as follows: A. Field effect mode of operation with image storage and erasure An electric field is applied across the liquid crystal film by a potential applied to the top conductive coating 2 and any one or more of the resistive elements 5. The liquid crystal transforms to the second chromatic state in the area of electric field imposition. After the field is removed; it assumes the third chromatic state in the areas over the resistive elements 5. These areas can be selectively erased by passing a current through the rear resistive elements, thereby heating the liquid crystal to the isotropic melt temperature. On cooling, those areas which had been heated return to the first chromatic state and a semipermanent (stored) pattern is displayed from the areas over the elements which were not thermally erased.
When it is desired to change the stored image; the remaining resistive elements can be heated or the entire display unit can be heated by passing a current through the top conductive coating 2 to effect erasure. This mode of operation is more complex for dynamic display but has the advantage that the field can be applied to all the resistive elements at one time and individual switches to these elements are not required.
B. Thermal mode of operation with storage option;
The device is operated thermally in the following manner:
An electric current is passed through the resistive element 5 by means of separate pairs of leads 8, 8' for each such resistive element. The heating of each element raises the temperature of the encapsulated liquid crystal directly above theelement to the isotropic melting point. The heated portion becomes non-reflecting in contrast to the colored appearanceof the unheated areas. When the current is interrupted, the element cools to ambient temperature and the liquid crystal returns to its initial colored (first chromatic) state. Thus different characters and designs (corresponding in shape and size to that of resistive elements 5) can be displayed in a transient manner.
When it is desired to store an image; one of the leads 8, 8' is connected to a high voltage source (not shown),
is removed, the electric field-induced colored image will remain in the third chromatic state.
Erasure of this image can be accomplished readily by heating the liquid crystal member to the isotropic melting temperature either by heating only those elements 5, which were used to generage the field or by passing acurrent through the top conductive coating 2, by applying a potential across leads L, L. On cooling, the liquid crystal film return to its original (first) colored state. Other operational modes will be apparent to thoseskilled in the art.
Hence it will-be apparent that the device of PK 7 is. in effect, a display device having polychromatic capability for chromatically representing an optionally comparatively permanent (third chromatic state) yet ther mally erasable configuration established by an electric field in optional conjunction with an independently operable yet thermally erasable transient, thermally operable, separate display means wherein said device comprises a transparent support (1); a transparent, electroconductive coating (2) on said support; conductive electrodes (7, 7') in contact with said coating and operatively connected by leads (L, L) to an electric field source; an insulator film (4) having a cholesteric liquid crystal member (3) in intimate proximityto said film and said coating; at least one electrically conductive resistive element (5) in thermally responsive association with said member, each said resistive element having a separate pair (8, 8') of conductive leads connected to a current source operable independently from said electric field source and wherein said cholesteric liquid crystal member is chromatically responsive to both an electric field and thermal energy applied thereto.
Formation of Cholesteric Liquid Crystal Member As noted above the cholesteric liquid crystal members employed in accordance with this invention are comprised of a profusion of randomly shaped inclusions of cholesteric liquid crystal material dispersed in a substantially continuous solid polymeric matrix.
' These members can be prepared readily by dispersing (emulsifying) minute droplets of cholesteric liquid crystal material in a dryable liquid solution of filmforming polymeric material and then coating, casting or otherwise depositing the solution upon the desired surface. Also films, sheets, layers, etc., can be preformed, e.g., by casting, and then assembled into the composite structure at the desired time. Coating and casting solutions can be prepared readily by adding the cholesteric liquid crystal compound or mixture to a solution, e.g., aqueous solution ot film-forming polymer matrix material, e.g., polyvinyl alcohol, using a stirrer, mixer, blender or equivalentagitation device until a liquid crystal droplet size range of from about five to about twenty microns is obtained. This emulsion can be coated on the substrate directly, e.g., by means of a draw-down applicator, onto a blackened substrate, e.g., of Mylar (polyethylene glycol terephthalate) to a wet film thickness of about ten mils (0.0254 cm.) and air dried, e.g., at about 25 Centigrade. Filmthickness can be increased by repeated sequences of coating and drying. The dried emulsion film can be stripped from its substrate and utilized as a preformed film which can be optionally opacified or blackened for. use in the articles of this invention. Various mixtures of cholesteric liquid crystals can be used with various polymeric filmforming matrix materials. in accordance with this invention films can be formed which contain from about 30 to about 95 weight per cent of cholesteric liquid crystal material, in droplet form, with the remainder being polymer matrix material Usually, however, the liquid crystal droplets represent from about 50 to about 90 weight per cent of the total film weight (droplets plus polymer matrix).
Layers cast from an emulsion of the liquid crystal material and then dried are dry to the touch (although containing liquid inclusions; are relatively unaffected by brushing contact with foreign bodies; are substantially immune to solute contamination, e.g., absorption of extraneous vapor; and are not subject to rapid deterioration by selective nucleation crystallization; and, in cases where crystallization does begin, it is stopped from further areawise development by a boundary of the polymer matrix.
Additional information on preparation of cholesteric liquid crystal members can be found in US. Pat. application Ser. No. 618,895, filed on Feb. 27, 1967 by Donald Churchill et al. The disclosure of this application is incorporated herein by reference.
Another feature of the incorporation of polymeric matrix bound droplets of cholesteric liquid crystalline materials into a system to provide an electric potentialactivated sensing or display device is the utilization of various mixtures of liquid crystals as to droplet size and chromatic response for indicating and/or displaying a wide range of specific levels of electric potential. Such a system, in one case, can comprise a plurality of layers, each layer comprising one, two or more types of droplets having different mixtures of chromatically responsive cholesteric liquid crystalline materials. These devices can be tailor made to accomplish the desired task by variation of characteristics imparted thereto by any one of the following adjustments; (a) electric field response range; (b) size of the liquid crystal droplets; (c) type and thickness of the polymer matrix material; (d) specific composition of the cholesteric liquid crystalline material(s), and the like, all to the purpose of choosing a response suitable for a given proposed use.
The present invention will be illustrated in greater detail in the following examples which are included herein for illustrative purposes and should not be interpreted as limiting the present invention.
All per cents and parts are by weight unless noted otherwise.
Examples 1 4 Cholesteric members comprised of droplets of cholesteric liquid crystal material confined in substantially continuous solid polymer matrices are prepared using the below tabulated variety of specific matrix and liquid crystal materials. In each case 60 grams of cholesteric liquid crystal material is dispersed in 100 cubic centimeters of the aqueous polymer solution in a Waring blendor heated to 70 Centigrade by a heating jacket. Upon dispersion and formation of the desired emulsion droplet size (in the range of l to 50 microns), the various solutions, respectively, were coated onto glass which was coated previously with tin oxide (in conventional manner). The tin oxide coating is of a thickness corresponding to a resistivity of approximately 100 ohms per square. After drying, a commercially available black lacquer is sprayed over the exposed surface of the liquid crystal-containing polymer matrix, and dried. The black lacquer is Spray On No. 6223008, which contains carbon black in an insulating binder matrix. Silver conductive paint is then applied to form an electrode on the black paint. and wiresareattached 9 tt. silver tt nsL E t n. oxide coating and connected to an alternating current source of electric potential (although ei t her alternating current or direct current can be utilized). The resulting basic configuration is essentially the same as those shown in FIGS. 3 and 7.
Upon application of the alternating current potential, the reflectance from the area over the silver electrode when viewed with incident white light, shifts from green (first chromatic state) to blue (second chromatic state). After the electric field is removed, the reflectance does not return to the original green color, but instead assumes a grey appearance (third chromatic state), which is in very good chromatic and configurational contrast to the green background areas which are not subjected to the field.
On reapplication of the electric field, that area of the encapsulated cholesteric liquid crystalline member through which the field passes instantaneously turns to the blue color (second chromatic state). Repeated, extensive cycling of the current on and off clearly demonstrates thatthe cholesteric liquid crystal member possesses the ability to be cycled for extended periods without breakdown or loss of clearly discernible color contrast between the first, second and third chromatic states.
The pertinent compositional make-up of the liquid crystal materials and matrix polymers used are tabulated below.
Polymer Concentration in Aque- The Elvanol" polymers are polyvinyl alcohols marketed by E. l. du Pont de Nemours & Company, Inc., Wilmington, Delaware. The differing numbers following the designation Elvanol indicate specific prod ucts having varying viscosities. Elvannl 7124" os cjaracterozed bu tje fact tjat (a) a four per cent, by weight, aqueous solution has a viscosity of 23 to 24 centipoises at 25 centigrade. and (b) the material is 97.7 to 98.8 per cent **Gelatin AE-4 is an acid extracted pigskin gelatin having a bloom strength of about 285 to about 305 grams and an isoelectric point of pH 8 to 9.
With further samples of the same articles produced as indicated herein, the information present in the display device (viz., the colored area(s) on a different colored background produced by the electric potential) can be erased by application of heat to attain the isotropic melting point of the liquid crystal mixture in ques tion, thus regenerating the entire film to its original green color (first chromatic state) when cooled again to room temperature. Another way of regenerating the film is to regenerate it selectively by application of the heat or an electric current of sufficient intensity to raise the temperature to the isotropic melting point of the liquid crystal mixture in selected areas only. in such a case, electrical current is passed through those resistive elements whose chromatic representation or image is to be erased, causing the elements to be heated to the isotropic transition temperature. Hence, the erasure of the chromatic image can be general (to regenerate the entire film) or'selective to a particular area thereof. The electroconductive force or potential levels required to secure the second chromatic state and erasure of the third chromatic state will depend mainly upon the thickness of the cholesteric liquid crystalline member and the spacing of the conducting electrodes. For example, erasure can be achieved readily for 10 to 100 micron thick cholesteric liquid crystalline members by applying a potential of 100 to 500 volts across the conductive elements to heat the elements to the isotropic melting point of a given liquid crystal mixture.
A variant of the article of Example 2 is prepared by applying the liquid crystal droplet-polymer matrix emulsion coating on Mylar film, painting the uncoated side of the Mylar film black with Spray On No. 6223008" and pressing the liquid crystal dropletpolymer matrix side of the film to the tin oxide-coated glass. The polyester (Mylar") film serves as an additional protective (barrier) film to protect the liquid crystal droplets, viz., additional to the polymer matrix. Of course, other equivalent protectivepolymeric materials can likewise be used. The use of such a protective film is preferable as it reduces the difficulty sometimes encountered in painting. the silver or other electroconductive material directly on the liquid crystal dropletcontaining polymer matrix film. While the cause of this difficulty is not entirely understood, it is believed due to some unconfined surface inclusions of liquid crystal material in the matrix film which allow a solvent component(s) in the silver paint to dissolve in the unprotected liquid crystals in the area(s) where such unconfined inclusions are present.
EXAMPLE 5 The procedure of Example 1 is repeated except using a Mylar protective film and a mixture of cholesteric liquid crystalline materials containing 73 weight per cent cholesteryl nonanoate and 27 weight per cent cholesteryl chloride. Upon applicaion of the electric field a color change of from red (first chromatic state) to dull grey or black (second chromatic state) was observed. It should be noted here that the comparatively small amount of heat generated due to application of the electric field is insufficient to cause the liquid crystal to become liquid. Upon turning off the current, the color instantaneously changes from dull grey black to a dull red (third chromatic state). This third chromatic state is sufficiently sharp in contrast to that of the first chromatic state to enable clear distinction thereof to the naked eye.
EXAMPLE 6 The procedure of Example I is repeated except using a protective Mylar" film and a cholesteric liquid crystalline mixture containing 79 weight per cent of cholesteryl nonanoate, 14 per cent of cholesteryl chloride and 7 weight per cent of oleyl cholesteryl carbonate. The
EXAMPLE 7 Twenty-five copper plates 1 cm. X 2 cm. X 0.25 cm. are bonded to a plastic substrate in an evenly spaced 5 row 5 column matrix. Each of the plates is soldered to a conductive lead wire extending through the substrate. The copper plates are sprayed with an insulating black lacquer and a film of matrix confined-liquid crystal droplets prepared in accordance with Example 6 is coated on the lacquer to a thickness of about 100 microns.
The assembly is mounted in a vacuum chamber which is equipped with a transparent plastic port (window) such that the liquid crystal-containing film is readily visible through the port. The conductivelead wires are connected to vacuum tight electrical feedthroughs in a plate at the opposite end of the vacuum chamber from the transparent port. A tungsten wire is mounted about two inches in front of the matrix (as noted, e.g., in FlG. 4) and connected to a direct current power supply.
The chamber is pumped down to l X 10 6 Torr vacuum and a current of about 3.5 amps are passed through the tungsten wire causing it to glow red. When selected plates in the assembly are charged to a positive potential of 700-1 ,500 volts, the electrons emitting from the hot wire are attracted to the surface of the liquid crystal-containing polymer matrix film adjacent to the charged plates, and the electric field established between the surface electrons and the plate causes the liquid crystalsto change shade of color from green to dark grey-green. When the field is removed by removing the potential from the plate, the chromatic image persists but in a readily discernible different shade, viz., lighter grey-green.
EXAMPLE 8 A liquid crystal display utilizing a conventional cathode ray tube (C.R.T.) output is prepared in the following manner. The target face of the tube is coated on the interior surface with a transparent electrode. A polymer matrix-bound film of field responsive cholesteric liquid crystal droplets (a s in Example 6 is coated in contact with the transparent electrode as shown in FIG. 5 followed by application of a protective Mylar film. A black insulating lacquer film is sprayed on the Mylar film. As mentioned previously, the black film is used to absorb light transmitted through the liquid crystal film in order to enhance the contrast of color or shade of color scattered from the liquid crystals.
Inasmuch as the liquid crystal is not in contact with another reflective surface on its interior surface (when used in a C.R.T.), this black insulator film is probably optional with this device.
After coating of the black film, the tube is pumped down to suitable vacuum and can be operated as a conventional video tube. The transparent electrode on the face plate is held as a positive potential and the electron beam is caused to trace the desired pattern on the liquid crystalcontaining film.
The local fields set up between the electrons trapped at the interior surface of the liquid crystal (or black insulator) and the positively charged transparent electrode cause the liquid crystals to change color in those areas and form a visible pattern which may be observed through the face plate and the transparent electrode. The pattern is optionally comparatively permanent, viz., subject to erasure, and one sweep of the electron beam will suffice to establish the image. This image can be erased generally or selectively (in certain areas thereof) by heating the liquid crystal to its isotropic transition temperature. The color shade changes are the same as noted above in Example 7.
Since the mechanism requires only that the electrons be deposited on the liquid crystal surface, the electron beam can be of much lower energy than normally required for stimulation of a phosphor (most often used for C.R.T. imaging).
The liquid crystal image depends on reflected light and therefore is best observed under strong exterior illumination a condition under which the standard phosphor coating is of marginal performance. Hence, strong color contrasts are achievable with the present invention in strong daylight versus very weak color contrasts with conventional phosphors at the same conditions.
EXAMPLE 9 This device is similar in many respects to that described under Example 8 except that the liquid crystal containing, polymer matrix bound film is applied to the exterior of the CRT. I
The face plate of the C .R.T. is prepared with a matrix of closely spaced conductive wires imbedded in it with one end of the wires exposed to the interior of the tube and the other end flush to the exterior surface of the face plate, as shown in FIG. 6. The exterior surface is painted with a black insulating film if desired, and then a film of cholesteric liquid crystal (as in Example 6 is coated on the black insulator followed byoptional application of a protective Mylar film.
A transparent plate with a transparent electrode coated on its surface is attached to the tube with the conducting surface in contact with either the protective Mylar film (if used) or the liquid crystal film.
The transparent electrode is charged positively and the CRT is operated in a conventional manner such that an electron beam strikes the wire ends extending through the face plate in the pattern desired. The electrons are conducted through the individual wires of the face plate to the surface of the cholesteric liquid crystal containing film which exhibits a color change in the areas between the wires which have been charged by the electron beam and the positively charged transparent electrode in the same manner as noted above in Example 7.
While the above examples illustrate the invention in great detail, it should be understood that the present invention in its broadest aspects is not necessarily limited to the specific materials, conditions, and structural embodiments set forth therein.
What is claimed is:
1. A cathode ray tube display device comprising a cathode ray tube having a face plate portion with an inner face; an interiorly located, electron emitting surface facing said inner face; a cholesteric liquid crystal member comprised of a profusion of individual, naked droplets of cholesteric liquid crystal material, chromatically responsive to an electric field, confined in a substantially continuous solid polymer matrix and located between said inner face and said electron emitting surface; a transparent electrode positioned between said cholesteric liquid crystal member and said inner face and an opaque insulating film positioned between said electron emitting surface and said cholesteric liquid crystal member.
2. A cathode ray tube display device as in claim wherein said droplets have an average size ranging from about 5 to about 20 microns and are uniformly distributed within said polymeric matrix.
3. A cathode ray tube display device comprising a cathode ray tube having a face plate portion with an outer face and an electron emitting surface located interiorly, a plurality of electron conducting elements extending through said face plate portion and in electric field imposing proximity to a cholesteric liquid crystal member comprised of a profusion of individual, naked droplets of cholesteric liquid crystal material, chromatically responsive to an electric field, confined in a substantially continuous solid polymer matrix and positioned in a generally parallel relationship with the outer face of said face plate portion, and a transparent electrode positioned generally parallel to yet externally of said cholesteric liquid crystal member.
4. A cathode ray tube display device as in claim 3 which includes a substantially transparent protective covering for said substantially transparent electrode.
5. A cathode ray tube display device as in claim 3 which includes an opaque contrasting background positioned intermediate said outer face of said face plate portion and said cholesteric liquid crystal member.
* t t t

Claims (4)

  1. 2. A cathode ray tube display device as in claim 1 wherein said droplets have an average size ranging from about 5 to about 20 microns and are uniformly distributed within said polymeric matrix.
  2. 3. A cathode ray tube display device comprising a cathode ray tube having a face plate portion with an outer face and an electron emitting surface located interiorly, a plurality of electron conducting elements extending through said face plate portion and in electric field imposing proximity to a cholesteric liquid crystal member comprised of a profusion of individual, naked droplets of cholesteric liquid crystal material, chromatically responsive to an electric field, confined in a substantially continuous solid polymer matrix and positioned in a generally parallel relationship with the outer face of said face plate portion, and a transparent electrode positioned generally parallel to yet externally of said cholesteric liquid crystal member.
  3. 4. A cathode ray tube display device as in claim 3 which includes a substantially transparent protective covering for said substantially transparent electrode.
  4. 5. A cathode ray tube display device as in claim 3 which includes an opaque contrasting background positioned intermediate said outer face of said face plate portion and said cholesteric liquid crystal member.
US00282881A 1968-02-23 1972-08-21 Display device comprising a profusion of naked droplets of cholesteric liquid crystal in a substantially continuous polymeric matrix Expired - Lifetime US3816786A (en)

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DE2452392A1 (en) * 1974-11-05 1976-05-06 Licentia Gmbh Reproduction system for colour images - involves cathode-ray tube with only one electron beam and optical filter arrangement
US4003081A (en) * 1974-01-21 1977-01-11 The Secretary Of State For Defence In Her Britannic Majesty's Government Of The United Kingdom Of Great Britain And Northern Ireland Display systems with controlled color filtering
US4641922A (en) * 1983-08-26 1987-02-10 C-D Marketing, Ltd. Liquid crystal panel shade
US4671618A (en) * 1986-05-22 1987-06-09 Wu Bao Gang Liquid crystalline-plastic material having submillisecond switch times and extended memory
US4673255A (en) * 1986-05-22 1987-06-16 John West Method of controlling microdroplet growth in polymeric dispersed liquid crystal
US4685771A (en) * 1985-09-17 1987-08-11 West John L Liquid crystal display material comprising a liquid crystal dispersion in a thermoplastic resin
US4688900A (en) * 1984-03-19 1987-08-25 Kent State University Light modulating material comprising a liquid crystal dispersion in a plastic matrix
US4728547A (en) * 1985-06-10 1988-03-01 General Motors Corporation Liquid crystal droplets dispersed in thin films of UV-curable polymers
US4994204A (en) * 1988-11-04 1991-02-19 Kent State University Light modulating materials comprising a liquid crystal phase dispersed in a birefringent polymeric phase
US5004323A (en) * 1988-08-30 1991-04-02 Kent State University Extended temperature range polymer dispersed liquid crystal light shutters
US5093735A (en) * 1990-09-13 1992-03-03 Kent State University Infrared modulating material comprising a liquid crystal and a medium
US5240636A (en) * 1988-04-11 1993-08-31 Kent State University Light modulating materials comprising a liquid crystal microdroplets dispersed in a birefringent polymeric matri method of making light modulating materials
US5453863A (en) * 1991-05-02 1995-09-26 Kent State University Multistable chiral nematic displays
US5668614A (en) * 1995-05-01 1997-09-16 Kent State University Pixelized liquid crystal display materials including chiral material adopted to change its chirality upon photo-irradiation
US5691795A (en) * 1991-05-02 1997-11-25 Kent State University Polymer stabilized liquid crystalline light modulating device and material
US5695682A (en) * 1991-05-02 1997-12-09 Kent State University Liquid crystalline light modulating device and material
US5847798A (en) * 1991-05-02 1998-12-08 Kent State University Polymer stabilized black-white cholesteric reflective display
US6172720B1 (en) 1997-05-23 2001-01-09 Kent Displays Incorporated Low viscosity liquid crystal material
US6204900B1 (en) 1997-03-28 2001-03-20 James L. Fergason Microencapsulated liquid crystal and a method and system for using same
US6585849B2 (en) 2001-07-26 2003-07-01 Eastman Kodak Company Method of making liquid crystal display having a dielectric adhesive layer for laminating a liquid crystal layer
EP1324106A1 (en) * 2001-12-26 2003-07-02 Eastman Kodak Company Electric field spreading layer for dispersed liquid crystal coatings
EP1324107A1 (en) * 2001-12-26 2003-07-02 Eastman Kodak Company Transparent electric field spreading layer for dispersed liquid crystal coatings
US6667785B2 (en) 2001-01-17 2003-12-23 Eastman Kodak Company Providing a color image in a light modulating layer having liquid crystal domains
US20040032545A1 (en) * 2002-08-16 2004-02-19 Eastman Kodak Company Pigment layer for polymer-dispersed liquid crystal displays
US20040246411A1 (en) * 2003-06-05 2004-12-09 Eastman Kodak Company Reflective cholesteric liquid crystal display with complementary light-absorbing layer
US20050068257A1 (en) * 2003-09-26 2005-03-31 Eastman Kodak Company Segmented display having uniform optical properties
US20050237473A1 (en) * 2004-04-27 2005-10-27 Stephenson Stanley W Coatable conductive layer
US20050253987A1 (en) * 2004-05-17 2005-11-17 Eastman Kodak Company Reflectance-matching layer for cholesteric display having dye layer and reflective conductors
US20050259300A1 (en) * 2004-05-21 2005-11-24 Eastman Kodak Company Mixed absorber layer for displays
US20050259211A1 (en) * 2004-05-21 2005-11-24 Eastman Kodak Company Matrix display through thermal treatment
US20060181658A1 (en) * 2005-02-16 2006-08-17 Eastman Kodak Company Conductive absorption layer for flexible displays
US20060262248A1 (en) * 2005-05-20 2006-11-23 Eastman Kodak Company Controlled gap states for liquid crystal displays
US20060262246A1 (en) * 2005-05-20 2006-11-23 Eastman Kodak Company Field blooming color filter layer for displays
US20060262245A1 (en) * 2005-05-20 2006-11-23 Eastman Kodak Company Conductive layer to reduce drive voltage in displays
US20060262260A1 (en) * 2005-05-18 2006-11-23 Eastman Kodak Company Barrier layers for coating conductive polymers on liquid crystals
US20060292311A1 (en) * 2005-06-28 2006-12-28 Kilburn John I UV cure equipment with combined light path
US20110069262A1 (en) * 2009-09-23 2011-03-24 Samsung Electronics Co., Ltd. Liquid crystal display
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US4003081A (en) * 1974-01-21 1977-01-11 The Secretary Of State For Defence In Her Britannic Majesty's Government Of The United Kingdom Of Great Britain And Northern Ireland Display systems with controlled color filtering
DE2452392A1 (en) * 1974-11-05 1976-05-06 Licentia Gmbh Reproduction system for colour images - involves cathode-ray tube with only one electron beam and optical filter arrangement
US4641922A (en) * 1983-08-26 1987-02-10 C-D Marketing, Ltd. Liquid crystal panel shade
US4688900A (en) * 1984-03-19 1987-08-25 Kent State University Light modulating material comprising a liquid crystal dispersion in a plastic matrix
US4728547A (en) * 1985-06-10 1988-03-01 General Motors Corporation Liquid crystal droplets dispersed in thin films of UV-curable polymers
US4685771A (en) * 1985-09-17 1987-08-11 West John L Liquid crystal display material comprising a liquid crystal dispersion in a thermoplastic resin
US4671618A (en) * 1986-05-22 1987-06-09 Wu Bao Gang Liquid crystalline-plastic material having submillisecond switch times and extended memory
US4673255A (en) * 1986-05-22 1987-06-16 John West Method of controlling microdroplet growth in polymeric dispersed liquid crystal
US5240636A (en) * 1988-04-11 1993-08-31 Kent State University Light modulating materials comprising a liquid crystal microdroplets dispersed in a birefringent polymeric matri method of making light modulating materials
US5004323A (en) * 1988-08-30 1991-04-02 Kent State University Extended temperature range polymer dispersed liquid crystal light shutters
US4994204A (en) * 1988-11-04 1991-02-19 Kent State University Light modulating materials comprising a liquid crystal phase dispersed in a birefringent polymeric phase
US5093735A (en) * 1990-09-13 1992-03-03 Kent State University Infrared modulating material comprising a liquid crystal and a medium
US5847798A (en) * 1991-05-02 1998-12-08 Kent State University Polymer stabilized black-white cholesteric reflective display
US5691795A (en) * 1991-05-02 1997-11-25 Kent State University Polymer stabilized liquid crystalline light modulating device and material
US5695682A (en) * 1991-05-02 1997-12-09 Kent State University Liquid crystalline light modulating device and material
US5453863A (en) * 1991-05-02 1995-09-26 Kent State University Multistable chiral nematic displays
US5668614A (en) * 1995-05-01 1997-09-16 Kent State University Pixelized liquid crystal display materials including chiral material adopted to change its chirality upon photo-irradiation
US6204900B1 (en) 1997-03-28 2001-03-20 James L. Fergason Microencapsulated liquid crystal and a method and system for using same
US6172720B1 (en) 1997-05-23 2001-01-09 Kent Displays Incorporated Low viscosity liquid crystal material
US6667785B2 (en) 2001-01-17 2003-12-23 Eastman Kodak Company Providing a color image in a light modulating layer having liquid crystal domains
US6585849B2 (en) 2001-07-26 2003-07-01 Eastman Kodak Company Method of making liquid crystal display having a dielectric adhesive layer for laminating a liquid crystal layer
EP1324107A1 (en) * 2001-12-26 2003-07-02 Eastman Kodak Company Transparent electric field spreading layer for dispersed liquid crystal coatings
US6639637B2 (en) 2001-12-26 2003-10-28 Eastman Kodak Company Field spreading layer for dispersed liquid crystal coatings
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US6707517B2 (en) 2001-12-26 2004-03-16 Eastman Kodak Company Transparent field spreading layer for dispersed liquid crystal coatings
US20040032545A1 (en) * 2002-08-16 2004-02-19 Eastman Kodak Company Pigment layer for polymer-dispersed liquid crystal displays
US6788362B2 (en) 2002-08-16 2004-09-07 Eastman Kodak Company Pigment layer for polymer-dispersed liquid crystal displays
US20040246411A1 (en) * 2003-06-05 2004-12-09 Eastman Kodak Company Reflective cholesteric liquid crystal display with complementary light-absorbing layer
US6950157B2 (en) 2003-06-05 2005-09-27 Eastman Kodak Company Reflective cholesteric liquid crystal display with complementary light-absorbing layer
US7372530B2 (en) 2003-06-05 2008-05-13 Industrial Technology Research Institute UV curable conductive layers in LC displays
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US7129911B2 (en) 2003-09-26 2006-10-31 Eastman Kodak Company Segmented display having uniform optical properties
US20050237473A1 (en) * 2004-04-27 2005-10-27 Stephenson Stanley W Coatable conductive layer
US20070013829A1 (en) * 2004-04-27 2007-01-18 Stephenson Stanley W Coatable conductive layer
US20090081359A1 (en) * 2004-04-27 2009-03-26 Industrial Technology Research Institute (Itri) Coatable conductive layer
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US20050253987A1 (en) * 2004-05-17 2005-11-17 Eastman Kodak Company Reflectance-matching layer for cholesteric display having dye layer and reflective conductors
US20050259300A1 (en) * 2004-05-21 2005-11-24 Eastman Kodak Company Mixed absorber layer for displays
US20050259211A1 (en) * 2004-05-21 2005-11-24 Eastman Kodak Company Matrix display through thermal treatment
US7195813B2 (en) * 2004-05-21 2007-03-27 Eastman Kodak Company Mixed absorber layer for displays
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US7630029B2 (en) 2005-02-16 2009-12-08 Industrial Technology Research Institute Conductive absorption layer for flexible displays
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US7532290B2 (en) 2005-05-18 2009-05-12 Industrial Technology Research Institute Barrier layers for coating conductive polymers on liquid crystals
US7999832B2 (en) 2005-05-20 2011-08-16 Industrial Technology Research Institute Controlled gap states for liquid crystal displays
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US20060262246A1 (en) * 2005-05-20 2006-11-23 Eastman Kodak Company Field blooming color filter layer for displays
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